Luctus
Saturday, April 26, 2025
 | Don Tirso de Irureta Goyena circa 1908 - Manila | Luto is Spanish for mourning. The word comes from the Latin luctus which means mourning.
Of late the mounting evidence is that most of the people I
ever worked with and my family are all dead. When I bike every day in the nice
weather at my age 82 I don’t think I am an exception. I believe I will die soon
(statistically).
Waiting to die is not as much and angst producing fear as
watching those around me disappear into oblivion.
At this moment a relative who lives in North Vancouver told
me yesterday, “I am like Rosemary. I have cancer and I will die in two months.”
A photographer friend of mine has signed up to MAID and will die in mid-June.
All this death had me thinking about death in that last
century. There was no social media so you could not write, “My grandfather
would have been 150 years old today. I miss him.” Death, while feared, was shown respect.
Embedded in my memory are the many photographs of my
grandfather, Don Tirso de Irureta Goyena where he is wearing a mourning band.
In my box of less valuable family jewels (most are at my bank) there is this
lovely mourning bracelet jewel that my grandmother often wore and then my mother
when my abuelita (her mother) died.
There is something beautiful in a jewel that was made to
order for one precise purpose. It signified that someone in your family had
died.
I cannot wear it as my hand does not fit through it. I
wonder as my life is cutting short if anybody in my family will understand its
purposeful beauty.
Rosemary & My Grandmother Shared a Talent
Friday, April 25, 2025
 | 24 April 2025 - Fuji X-E1 & Lensbaby | My grandmother (I called her Abue) had an uncanny talent of
knowing when to move. Sometime around 1921 she became a widow in Manila. She had
three children, one was to be my mother. She told me many years later, that
although she had a magnificent coloratura soprano voice, she could not sing
opera in the Philippines for a living. Only prostitutes did that in those
years. She picked up sticks and moved the whole family to the Bronx.
As a little boy she would tell me that on the way to New
York their Japanese ship arrived at a port in a city that had trees and
mountains. She would pronounce the name “Vancooover”. For years every time I
happen to go into what was the CP Train Station at the foot of Granville I sit
on a bench and imagine them walking across to take the train to Montreal.
As she noticed the market fluctuations in the US in beginning of 1929,
my Abue and family moved back to the Philippines.
In 1936 she felt the winds of war in the East, so they moved
to Buenos Aires. In the early 50s when Perón started burning churches, my grandmother knew it was time to move. We moved to Mexico City in 1953.
My Abue died in Veracruz 1970. She had dementia but she did
meet my Rosemary.
In 1975 Rosemary informed that she did not think that Mexico
City was a good place for our two daughters, Alexandra and Hilary to grow up
in. We were to move in our VW Beetle to Vancouver, British Columbia.
In 1986 I was informed by my director of operations that she
was tired of having a little garden in our Burnaby townhouse. We were to move
to a splendid corner garden house in Kerrisdale.
It was 7 years ago where I (yes me!) informed Rosemary that
we were going to move out of Kerrisdale and sell the house for good money and
move to Kitsilano. Thanks to Rosemary’s financial acumen and the selling of
that Kerrisdale property I do not worry know about making ends meet.
I think a lot on how Rosemary “inherited” from my
grandmother the foresight for moving and from my mother, her beautiful legs.
These warmer spring days in Kitsilano I have been biking
every day to Point Grey Road. I have been taking my Fuji X-E1 with its
Lensbaby. As I bike on all those safe bike lanes and marvel at all those little
parks by the water, I salute my Rosemary for her talent for moving.
A Dinosaur Rose Blooms in My Garden
Thursday, April 24, 2025
 | Rosa
sericea ssp. omeiensis f. pteracantha - 24 April 2025 |
The members of the Vancouver Rose Society (I am a member and
we call ourselves rosarians but we do not have secret handshakes) compete every
year in being able to announce the first bloom of the season. I have lost as
someone in sunnier Victoria has claimed credit a week ago,
So this blog announcing my first bloom will not interest
most of my fellow rosarians. But there is a proviso as I may be the only member
of the society with a species rose that besides having a long and complicated
name is the only rose with four petals. Species roses have five.
But there is a bit of good news that might interest a few
and that is that on Easter Sunday at Mandeville I found a very healthy Rosa ‘Double
Delight’. It is not an easy hybrid tea rose to grow. Somehow when we moved from
our Kerrisdale garden 7 years ago to Kitsilano it either died or got lost in
the move. Double Delight of Raspberry Flummery
Few of the younger members of the VRS will know that in the
90s this rose won many awards at the VanDusen Floral Hall for its exquisite
perfume.
There is this link (above) to one of my blogs where I mention its
connection to raspberry flummery.
Daintily Kneeling on Her Garden Cushion
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
With Rosemary in my mind telling me, “Alex, we have to get
the garden to look nice as people are going to start coming and we have the
Vancouver Rose Society open garden sometime in June,” I worked all day.
As I was neating it all up, I noticed Rosemary’s garden
cushion she used when she got on her knees (often) and particularly when she
cut the grass by the flower beds with her scissors. I decided to put it into
the wash. It came out like new. And today I did edge my laneway garden bed with scissors.
I have a couple of jeans faded at the knees that I use when I
garden. I have offered my Lillooet daughter Alexandra her mother’s cushion. I
am sure she will take it.
In my kitchen drawer I have five of Rosemary’s scissors. She
used them in the garden, to cut chicken before cooking it, pizza, and for just about
anything else.
It was in Mexico where I first heard from Rosemary that
pants could be a pant and scissors a scissor.
Until Ale comes for a visit I will lovingly look at
Rosemary’s cushion and think back of her daintily kneeling in the garden with
one of our cats on her side.
The Best Friends - Isabel Bono
Tuesday, April 22, 2025
LOS
MEJORES AMIGOS - ISABEL BONO (In English below)
Tengo
amigos
a los
que nunca he preguntado nada,
de los
que me gustaría
conocer
cada minuto de su infancia
a qué
jugaban
si les
dolía perder
si se
arrancaban las costras de las heridas
si
sentían miedo
si ya lo
perdieron
pero yo
no pregunto
me
gustaría haber estado allí
en cada
infancia de cada amigo,
haber
sudado con ellos
eso ya
no es posible
como no
lo será sudar sus muertes
mis
amigos morirán lejos
y yo no
sabré a quién preguntar
The Best
Friends – Isabel Bono
I have friends
to whom I have never asked anything
friends I would like to know
about every minute of their childhood
what did they play
did it hurt them to lose
did they scratch off their scabs
where they afraid
or no longer afraid
but I don’t ask
I would have liked to have been there.
In each of my friends’childhoods
to have sweated with them
that is no longer possible
as it will not to sweat their deaths
my friends will die far away
and I will no longer know whom to ask.
My translation The above poem by a Spanish poet born in Málaga in1964 is
of a poet I did not know anything about except that the above poem appeared in
m Twitter/X feed. Their algorithm is right on the money for my literary tastes.
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