Thursday, April 23, 2026

Departure

 Today is a day of piles in the hall, cleaning the fridge, eating on paper plates, and packing the car. Not to mention all the Florida-specific tasks like placing DampRid (bagged granules that soak up moisture) in closets, and last-minute saran wrap over the toilets (discouraging evaporation and possible critters from pipes).

      This year we're also moving things away from the windows for the workmen to install new ones. In theory, all the windows in the complex will be replaced while we're gone, but we suspect the process will be slow and still be in the works when we return next winter. 

      We leave tomorrow morning. In a walk around the complex I gathered some good-bye images:



Some are just the oddnesses we have around here, like these discarded shells from a local bird or animal's lunch. 

We must have fresh-water mussels in the ponds?


 

 





Or plants that before in the north I've only seen growing in pots.

When I was a little girl in Virginia, my mother used to have these on a window sill. 






Evidence of what a dry winter it's been. Without a rainy summer, this tiny pond may well be gone by the time we get back. 









The bunnies were out - and convinced that sitting veery, veery still would make them invisible. 




A delicate gray heron of some kind.


A magnolia bloom whose days in the Florida sun seemed as short as my own.









Monday, April 20, 2026

Marty puts down her drink and runs to the rescue.


 



       We’ve taken an almost proprietary interest in the little moorhen family that would appear and peck their way through the grass and water’s edge around our pond. Mom, Dad, and six tiny chicks, little black ping-pong balls. Their home base is probably the stand of grasses and water plants next to our bridge.

          While they’re good swimmers – sometimes diving under water to get to food – in spite of not having webbed feet (Thank you, Wikipedia), and can fly, I most often see the parents running hell-bent-for-leather across the ground as though they’re about to miss a bus.

         

So, there we were, My Guy and I, late one afternoon sitting fat and happy on the lanai, margaritas in hand, when he looks across to the bridge and says, “The otter’s after the moorhens!”  

          Well, we’re so invested in these little balls of fluff that when they appear near our unit, we always count to make sure all six babies are there. So, fueled by righteousness and alcohol, I leapt up, found my flip-flops and walked at top speed (no one wants to see me run) around two buildings, hoping to get to the scene of the crime in time.

          I rounded the second building and a second-floor couple standing on their lanai called down, “He’s after the chicks!”

          I clapped my hands loudly and a gray-black form shot out from the hedge next to the building and dashed back into the water. Let me tell you, he was huge, even bigger than our last sixteen pound house cat, what with that big thick tail.

          I marched back home, victorious. I hoped.

          That night, though, until the small hours of the morning, I could hear a bird calling with the regularity of an alarm that wouldn’t quit. I hoped it wasn’t the mom or dad calling for a missing chick.

          Ah well, I told myself, it’s the cycle of life. These are wild animals who live precarious lives. And so on and so forth. Sigh.

          And then, frabulous joy and excitement!! I looked outside today and saw both parents with all six chicks scrabbling away right outside our screens.


          We’re leaving here on Friday and none too soon. I want the happy end of this story to hold.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Rude Awakening

 




Tomorrow we’ll be listening as someone sings a thought we’ve all had – ‘If I were a rich man. . .’

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Duty Done!

           Our next door neighbors here are so close that our porches sit side-by-side. We’re outwardly friendly, but like the big ole hypocrites we are, we avoid them with dodges and weaves worthy of any prizefighter in the ring.

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Morning Constitutional

 




Another stroll around our quiet (especially now that many of us snowbirds have left) complex once again provided some unexpected sights.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Shameless or Brilliant Marketing?

 


As we were leaving the beach the other day, I noticed something that at first seemed out of context, but then realized it was perfectly placed. 

A Little Free Library

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Disasters in Clay

Because last year we’d enjoyed our maiden voyage into the land of clay, my friend Ann and I returned to the Venice art center for another pottery class. Neither one of us lays any claim to artistic ability, but this seemed like something even we could do.