Why did the chicken cross the road?

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A local chicken (Rhode Island Red?) has been wandering loose all day, followed in our Willow Glen neighborhood email list by a string of silly chicken jokes. She was seen most recently eating snails under the lemon tree next door.  She seems determined to be independent, although she enjoyed a cool drink when offered a dish of water. We hope she finds her way home safely.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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WP668 Caboose and Cactus

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WP 6668, our backyard railroad caboose, sits in a garden of succulents and cactus. In fact, we measure the growth of our cactus by how high on the caboose they rise. The Silver Torch (Cleistocactus Strausii) with its obscene pink flowers, and the Black Spined Aloe are particularly vigorous growers. I am probably going to take out one of the aloes before it overwhelms its spiny neighbors. It can go live on the river bank where size does not matter.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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July 4th Wedding Anniversary

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John and I were married on 4 July 2000. The 4th of July is a great day to get married. Caterers are available (since most people are home making their own BBQ) and there are always American Independence Day fireworks to celebrate.

When we got married, John and I each had a home with too much stuff already.  What we needed was time to enjoy our family and friends and our big event. So, we outsourced. We asked close friends each to take on a big task (the dress, the cake, flowers, music, wine, catering, whatever) instead of giving a gift. We paid for everything and promised not to micromanage. We are blessed in having organized friends, so everything went perfectly. For guests who needed to give us something, we collected money for shares in a very comfortable Morris chair – that they can come and sit in when they visit. We got married in our own San Jose backyard and we had a wonderful time!

John and I donated the altar flowers today at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church in Saratoga, CA to celebrate our 12th wedding anniversary.

Today at church:

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Our family in 2000:
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Images Copyright 2012 Katy Dickinson

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Grandma Jones

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This is one in my occasional series of profiles of people worth remembering. Grandma Jones was our nanny – and one of the most important people in my life. My daughter Jessica is named in her honor. Grandma Jones took care of my two brothers and me every week day when our parents were working or busy. Jessie Dale Reed Jones was born in 1891 and died in 1983. She was the widow of U.S. Army Captain Ernest Thomas Jones, who died in San Francisco in 1941 (just as the U.S. was entering World War II). She is buried in the Golden Gate National Cemetery (SECTION K, SITE 2765-A).

Grandma Jones came to work for our family after my older brother Mark was born in 1955. My mother said Grandma Jones tapped on the window of their flat on Cervantes Boulevard in San Francisco’s Marina district. She said she heard a baby crying and that if my mother wanted a babysitter to please call. Grandma Jones took care of us from before my birth until I was in High School. I remember that she used to sit at our table and drink coffee with milk and smoke a cigarette after my mother got home in the afternoon.  Sometimes she shared an afternoon drink with my mother.

My mother said that Grandma Jones talked about being stationed in China before World War II, and about Dwight Eisenhower whom she knew when he was a young officer in Georgia. Grandma Jones described Eisenhower as being jovial, even bouncy, but that he wore his cap too far back on his head. Even twenty years after her beloved husband’s death, I remember her talking about her Ernest. My mother said that Grandma Jones regularly visited his grave in the Presidio in San Francisco.

Every day I would walk home from school to find her making my snack – an egg salad sandwich with a bowl of cream of mushroom soup. (The first time I ordered an egg salad sandwich in a restaurant, I was very surprised that it was served cold. When Grandma Jones made it, the egg was still warm from the boiling water.)

Even though Grandma Jones had family in Roanoke, Virginia, she was independent and wanted to live alone in San Francisco. She had friends on the Presidio Army base but was a little bored. Taking care of our family filled her days. I was her special favorite and thrived on her devotion.  Every Christmas, we would dress in our best and Grandma Jones would take my brothers and me to the Emporium department store on Market Street downtown. We admired the decorated shop windows and the Emporium’s great dome.  We had lunch in the store, talked to Santa, and could pick out anything we wanted for a present, so long as it cost less than $5. I remember my great excitement at a day out with Grandma Jones, a restaurant lunch, getting to use the family bathroom stall (for which she paid extra), and picking out my own present.

Grandma Jones finally moved to live with her family in Roanoke toward the end of her long life.  She died peacefully in her sleep at the age of 92 after suffering a stroke.  Recently, when sorting through older art by my mother, we found a painting that may be of Grandma Jones.  We have added it to our family portrait collection in the dining room.

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Images Copyright 1954-2012 by Katy Dickinson and Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson

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Chinese Hot Pot

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Growing up in San Francisco, I started using chopsticks soon after learning to use a fork. Sunday family dinners were usually in Chinatown at Yet Wah, a restaurant near the children’s playground at Portsmouth Square.

Since starting to work for Huawei two years ago, I have been introduced to different kinds Chinese cooking, particularly hot pot. My husband John is very adventurous about food so he tried it first with coworkers before convincing the whole family to experiment.  Knowing what ingredients to order can be a challenge but it is fun to cook together in a big pot in the middle of the dinner table. We have eaten at several places, including Hot Pot City in Milpitas, and Little Sheep Mongolian Hot Pot in Santa Clara, CA. I like Little Sheep best because of the quality of their broth – especially after everything else has been eaten and noodles are added for the last course.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Tree Bark

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I enjoy noticing different kinds of tree bark, particularly in hardy street trees which have to put up with daily abuse from passersby, dogs, and bad air. Below is a picture of a particularly badly treated tree. Apparently someone stapled an electrical cord to it then left it so long that the bark grew around it.

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Images Copyright 2010-2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Nancy Reagan’s Apple

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In a meeting at work today, I admired a lovely dark red glass apple on my co-worker’s desk. When I asked if she was a teacher, she told me that the apple was given to her Great Aunt Magdelaine Pezone by First Lady Nancy Reagan. Her Aunt had worked for Elizabeth Arden in her salon on Rodeo Drive in Beverley Hills, California. Nancy Reagan gave her the apple as a thank you gift.  It is signed and dated 1981 and from the bottom you can see that the glow of the deep red skin is set off by an opaque white glass core.

Kristen Pezone is a lawyer and she uses the apple, and her other glass paperweights, to hold documents flat when she is studying them.  For the same purpose, I use interesting stones gathered during my world-wide travels. It is pleasant to have a few familiar and lovely things to help at the office.

Image Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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