Bougainvillea in Bondage (Photos)

When we  flew to Mulege, Baja Mexico last month, we saw many lovely bougainvillea vines in full bloom, some trained as small trees with trunks often a foot or more wide. I decided to convert my backyard Barbara Karst Bougainvillea into a small tree. This
will give us a red flowering canopy in the summer and, as the vines grow thicker and develop bark, should also protect the tropical plant against the short winter freezes we get here in San Jose, California. This also allowed us to remove the garden fence which is no longer needed because we replaced our pool with WP668, our backyard caboose.

I started with the vine spread out along a black metal garden fence. Over two days, I compressed the thorny vines into a column using green plastic garden tape. Finally, I enclosed the compressed vines between three black metal panels which are zip tied together. (I removed the garden tape after enclosing the vines between the panels.) My vine is now a 6′ column with a fountain of vines coming out the top. It looks squashed at the moment but it is growing fast. Here is how far I have gotten on this project:

Vine tree in Baja

Mulege Bougainvillea vine tree, Baja Mexico photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

My Vine Blooming in 2007

Barbara Karst Bougainvillea vine blooming photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Step One – Tie it Up

Bougainvillea vine, Step One - Tie it Up photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Step Two – Vine In Bondage

Bougainvillea vine Step Two - Vine In Bondage photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2007-2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Lent, Soup, and the Millennium Development Goals

My parish church,
St. Andrew’s
, Saratoga, has been offering an inspiring series
of Wednesday night soup suppers during this Lenten season. Please come join us for the final Wednesday Soup Supper, on 19 March. We will
be watching the excellent feature film

The Girl in the Café
.

I have attended all but one of the series. Even though some of the topics
have been disturbing to hear about, the large room has been almost
full each time. We gather in the Center at 6 pm, collect our soup,
bread, water, and cookies, then sit down at round tables to talk.
After about half an hour of visiting, we watch a
Bullfrog Life film and hear a
speaker.

The topic of each evening has been one or more of the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The Millennium Development Goals are a framework world leaders have agreed upon to reduce poverty and improve lives. These eight goals offer a vision of what we want to achieve to address the challenges facing the world today. The national
Episcopal Church and our
own Diocese of El Camino Real have
each endorsed the MDGs. I wrote about the MDGs in my
January 26, 2007
blog entry. The eight goals are:

    1. Eliminate Extreme Poverty
    2. Achieve Universal Primary Education
    3. Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
    4. Reduce Child Mortality
    5. Improve Maternal Health
    6. Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria, and Other Diseases
    7. Ensure Environmental Sustainablity
    8. Develop a Global Partnership for Development

In addition to the Wednesday Soup Suppers, each Sunday sermon during
this Lenten season has been structured around the MDGs. St Andrew’s has
also used the MDG Litany from the Bread of Life as part of the Sunday
service. Linda Rogers created a new MDG banner and there is a table
display of MDG information from Episcopal
Relief and Development
(ERD) on colorful cloth from Africa.

Here is what we have heard so far at St. Andrew’s Wednesday Soup Suppers:

    • UNCSW 2005 – Melita Thorpe spoke on her experience as an affiliate representative to the United Nations 49th Session and the Millennium Development Goals. Melita is a member of the CSW (Commission on the Status of Women). She has made 17 trips to Africa and carrying medical supplies, visiting the AIDS ward in the Nairobi hospital, talking to women about their situation in Zimbabwe, Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi.
    • Jean Hankey spoke on MDG Goal 1 – Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger; Goal 2 – Achieve universal primary education; and Goal 3 – Promote gender equality and empower women. Jean is co-chair of the Women Helping Women group at St. Andrews. The group brought handmade note cards to sell as a fund raiser.
    • Dr. John Watson-Williams & Melita Thorpe spoke on Goal 4 – Reduce Child mortality & Goal 5 – Improve maternal health. John spoke from his experience treating Malaria in Africa. He also presented research data about the effect of Malaria on maternal health.
    • Dr. John Watson-Williams & Jean-Claude Gigot spoke on Goal 6 – combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other preventable disease. Jean-Claude spoke of his
      experiences working to combat disease in Cote d’Ivoire.
    • Bruce Friesen spoke on Goal 7 – Ensure environmental sustainability & Goal 8 – Develop a global partnership for development.

      Bishops Blend
      Coffee was served and everyone was sent home with a sample. ERD is offering Bishops Blend, Pura Vida’s premium line of Certified Fair Trade, organic, and shade-grown coffees from Central America and Indonesia. Purchases of Bishops Blend helps ERD meet needs worldwide.

Melita wrote in her notes on these suppers: “It is hoped that by sharing our hopes and concerns for a world in which our Christian faith calls us to action, we helped our congregation engage in these issues in our own context as well as globally. Together, we can work toward creating a world where all God’s people may flourish. Katy, I cannot speak for the others but I am happy to help facilitate a program on the MDG’s with any congregation.”

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Goodreads

A few weeks ago, my daughter recommended that I check out the social networking site
goodreads. I have been enjoying it
ever since. It is a site for people who like to read and want to find out what
others are reading and why. Users list the books they are reading and recommending
and can see the lists and comments of other readers. I have written up 16 books
so far, starting with Bill Bryson’s William Shakespeare: The World As Stage
(2007). My review:

      Research into the life and times of William Shakespeare is surprisingly still evolving as new documents are found even after 400 years. So this new biography makes a helpful and fun addition to the many thousands of books about Shakespeare already available. Bill Bryson’s entertaining books are usually about his life. This is the first I have read that is on a literary topic. He has clearly done his homework and, even though I added a few snippy margin comments, generally his conclusions are sound. Bryson leaves out what was learned about the Globe theater from site excavations and he sometimes is too focussed on “we can’t know anything really”; however, this would still make a solid introductory book to a topic which is all too often dry and nitpicky.

I have established the following goodreads “bookshelves” for my reviews so far:
children-youth (1) | fantasy-fiction (4) | general (5) | history (4) | mysteries (2) | religion (1) | shakespeare (2) | trains-and-transit (2)

I am having a good time writing book reviews and reading the reviews by others of books
which I have already read or about which I am curious.

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Pearl Jasmine Tea, Persian Food

Tonight we went out to dinner with friends at our favorite Persian
restaurant, Chelokababi
on Wolfe at El Camino in Sunnyvale, CA. We had a well-prepared and
tasty dinner of Joojeh Kababs with rice and tomato but passed on
dessert. On the way home, we went to
Ten Ren Tea
at Wolfe near highway 280 for “spitballs in milk” or
black tapioca pearls in milky tea. In addition to wanting spitballs for
dessert, we went to Ten Ren because we were almost out of Pearl Jasmine tea
at work.

As I wrote in my
February 7, 2008
blog, one of the local events held on Sun’s Menlo Park campus
is our weekly party during which we serve hot tea from all over the world, plus
cookies and other goodies. While we usually offer Assam or Darjeeling plus some
blend flavors, jasmine tea is the all-time favorite. Ten Ren’s Pearl Jasmine
costs $100/pound but it is worth it. Just the glorious smell from the gold metal
can makes me happily lightheaded.

When we visited Sun’s China Engineering and Research Institute in Beijing for
three weeks in 2005, of course we bought tea to bring home. In the Ten-Fu
shop, we were introduced to jasmine varieties that smelled even more heavenly
than Pearl Jasmine. It was explained that there were jasmine teas available
in China that were higher up the mountain (in quality and price) than what was
available in the US. Unfortunately, we have since used up all of the lovely
tea we bought in Beijing so we buy new supplies at Ten-Ren.

Last week, we tried a new restaurant at 1180 Lincoln Avenue in Willow Glen, San Jose,
called Maykadeh Cafe. This is a sister to Maykadeh Persian Cuisine in San
Francisco. Maykadeh Cafe shares its space with an antique store so the
decorations are fascinating. The food is also very good and we plan to return
soon to try more menu choices.

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OpenSolaris Governing Board Elections

My husband, John Plocher, is one of the candidates for the
OpenSolaris Governing
Board. Elections are taking place during this week. If you want to
learn more, go to:
OGB Election Candidates
. Candidate biographies, position statements,
and Podcast interviews are linked.

John and I have been discussing OGB issues and politics for a long time.
He considered seriously whether he should accept the nomination to
run for the OGB. I know if John is elected, he will do a fine job.

It took me time to recognize that the OGB discussions I was hearing
about: charter, constitution, and sources of authority, were very
familiar.
St. Andrew’s
, our parish church, is in the
Episcopal Diocese of El Camino Real
(ECR). Our Diocese spent years having this same discussion.

As the October 2007 diocesan convention approached, our governance
discussions about ECR’s Constitution and Canons revisions escalated
in intensity and passion. John and I are both ECR convention delegates.
We went to dozens of diocesan meetings and were very involved in trying to
get the best structures well documented. Finally, our newly-elected
Bishop Mary
pointed out that these issues were diverting all of us from the business
at hand. That is, discussing the draft documents at length and working
to get the details perfect was absorbing all of the energy we
should be putting toward the work of the church. She called
discussing the canons the safe option, a comfortable place to spend
energy. (What we at Sun call a “mink hole” – that is, a very soft,
warm and comfortable rat hole, a distracting topic.) Bishop Mary
asked us to pick the harder option, doing the work that was given us
to do.

On our refrigerator at home is a magnet that says

      Perfection

      is the enemy


      of “Good Enough”

A lesson that many organizations need to learn, and the lucky
ones do learn.

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WP668 Puttering

We are still puttering around with little jobs on WP668.

Over the weekend and yesterday night, John got our backyard
caboose all ready for the rough electrical inspection. In Santa
Clara County, there are two required inspections for electrical
work done under a building permit: the rough inspection
(where the wiring cables and trenches and boxes and switches are
opened up for viewing), and the final inspection (after all
of the wires and plates are put away and screwed down). To keep a
permit open, there have to be inspections at least every six months. WP668
has two permits open, one for the stairs and the other for the
electrical. When the inspector was out for the rough inspection of
the stairs he also looked over the wiring and gave John an idea
of what he wanted to see for its rough inspection. Next step is
to schedule the official electrical rough inspection visit.

While John was finishing the wiring, I painted more external lettering on
WP668. It takes several coats of yellow paint for each set, so I can
only use the stencils when the weather is dry plus I have a whole day to paint, let dry, and paint again. I have three more sets
of letters to paint, including the big WP 668 on each bay window. I am
leaving the bays for last because we still have to touch up the paint
on one bay window and prime and paint the other. For more lettering
and stenciling information, check my blogs:

November 27, 2007
and

December 4, 2007
.

In between painting, I have been weeding. I have pulled up bucketsfull
of volunteer bluegrass, burclover, buttercup oxalis, creeping woodsorrel, mallow, scarlet pimpernel, plus some horrible creeping green weed with purple flowers whose name I don’t know. It is pretty and breaks easily
but if ignored twines around and mounds and strangles everything. Months
of rain have encouraged the weed seed to make its bid for next generation
survival. I cleared out the flower bed along the driveway – removing the
weeds so that the California poppies, sweet alyssum, gazanias, and fennel
can grow all summer. John used the torch to burn more weeds out from
between the bricks in the garden walkways. I also moved some red rocks
into a ring around my new Evergreen Pear tree (Pyrus Kawakamii) so that I
can mulch it against the summer heat. We are getting ready to install
my new cactus garden between WP668 and the house.

Last week, I pulled my red Barbara Karst Bougainvillea vine off
the fence and enclosed it in three ornamental black metal panels.
I want to make it grow into a multi-trunk upright tree like the ones
I saw in
Mulege, Baja Mexico
. My Bougainvillea fought with all of its long
thorns but it is now firmly (if unwillingly) bound in a 6′ column with a
fountain of vines coming out the top. I hope this works!

This week’s heap of yard waste waiting for pickup in front of our house is about 3′ high and 4′ in diameter.

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24 PreSEEDs Matched – Matching Update

The mentor matching cycle for the PreSEED pilot program participants
started on 19 February. 24 have been matched in 16 days (83%). There are
five participants left to match. All are now under consideration by
potential mentors.

The PreSEED pilot participants are among those invited to the SEED
mentoring program’s MidTerm Event on 11 April. 93 Sun attendees are registered
so far for this event. Speakers will include:


    • Jonathan Schwartz
      (Chief Executive Officer and President)

    • David Yen
      (Executive Vice President, Microelectronics)
    • Tiki Dare (Associate General Counsel, Sun Legal) speaking on
      OpenSolaris
    • Chris Frank (Senior Staff Engineer, Industrial Design Architect, & SEED Alumnus, Sun Systems Group) speaking on “Out of the Box: Initial Experiences Create Lasting
      Impressions”

    • Darryl Gove
      (Senior Staff Engineer, SEED Mentor & Alumnus, Sun Software Group)
      speaking about his new book

      Solaris Application Programming

    • Nicole Yankelovich
      (Principal Engineer, & SEED Mentor, Sun Labs)
      speaking on
      “Wonderland:
      Using a 3D Virtual World for Collaboration”

PreSEED is a pilot of the SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program.
More information on SEED is available at

http://research.sun.com/SEED/

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