The Humanity of a Cat
Sunday, July 05, 2026
 | | Niña | My male cat
Niño in the morning of June 12 was on my bed with his twin sister Niña, when I
touched him he did not respond. To my horror his eyes were open and did not
focus. He did not yet have rigor mortis.
Since then
Niña seems to have known of her loss and became extra affectionate with me. Of
late she has been adopting some of Niño’s habits. He was allowed on my red
table cloth dinner table. He would stare at me around 7:45pm knowing that I
would go into my bedside drawer and take out a handful of treats.
Because I
consider myself to be a Platonist I believe in the philosopher’s concept of
essences. Since Rosemary and I had many cats since 1977, when one would die we
would immediately go to the SPCA to adopt another middle-aged cat. We liked the
mutual adaptation. It was part of the fun.
Somehow the
new cat would have characteristics of the dead cat. One day my Portland baroque
bass player told me something that I have not forgotten. “Alex cats have in
their genes the memory of having been petted by Egyptian pharaohs.
I am
convinced that Niña understood the concept of death.
Sometimes I
tell people seriously (but it is a joke that I am thinking of becoming a trans
woman so I can then be an authentic cat lady. Some believe me.
With my
Rosemary (we were married for 52 years) gone on December 9, 2020 and with the
death of Niño I live alone. But I understand that I am not completely alone. I
baby talk Niña, who responds with little noises. She keeps me busy with her routines. I feel that I am useful.
When I went
to a baroque concert on July 1 when I left at a back alley this black cat was
staring at me. I was compelled to take his portrait. And yes a portrait is usual
of persons but then I am convinced of the humanity of a cat.
Not the Swan
 | Lauri Stallings
| Do it DifferentlyA couple of
days ago I wrote a blog called Do It Differently. It was about taking portraits
of musicians with their instruments while avoiding clichés. The violinist Karen
Gerbrecht and I coined the expression “the anti-violinist.
I worked
with modern dancer (now in Atlanta) Lauri Stallings when she was in Ballet BC
with the subject “the anti-ballerina”. Too often we discussed how ballerinas
are often compared to swans. Stallings told me that ballerinas had periods and
they sweated.
I was lucky
to have met Stallings who moved to Georgia and started her own company.
 | | With Hosta ' Forbidden Fruit' |
0.1 - 00.1 - 000.1
Saturday, July 04, 2026
 | | My grandmother María de los Dolores Reyes de Irureta Goyena - 1950 Buenos Aires | December 9,
2020 was a fatalistic date in my life. That is when my wife Rosemary with whom
I had been married for 52 years died. Six minutes before she died she asked, “Am
I dying?” I was unable to respond. In some ways once she died my family of two
daughters and two granddaughters somehow fractured.
My eldest
granddaughter whom Rosemary and I took around the world I see only twice a year
(once at Christmas). She does not answer my phone calls or my texts. The
younger sister Lauren I see rarely. I am not a grandfather, but an old man.
My youngest
daughter told me she does not read my blog (6959 to date) because she does not
want to become addicted to her phone. My other daughter, Alexandra lives in
remote Lillooet and I may see her about five times a year.
Last night I
did a Powerpoint presentation that was autobiographical on how I got into
photography at Cineworks. My youngest daughter, who would have been my only
family to attend was very busy at her job and told me that she had no makeup or
proper clothing to attend. I had given her money for Euber.
The
presentation went well but I was melancholic knowing that today I would be
faced with emptiness after the fact. Neither of my daughters called to find out
how my presentation had been received.
It is here
that I want to point out how close I was to my maternal grandmother. She told
me all kinds of advice related to the Don Quijote and Spanish refrains she
learned when she was educated in Valencia. The one comment of hers that applies to me at my age of 83 is “un cero
a la izquierda”. That translates to “a zero to the left”. I will explain that
in this way”
0.1, 00.1,
000.1 are all the same. After that initial zero the rest are not necessary.
In short I
feel that I am a cero a la izquierda. With only slight humour I tell people
that I will soon compose a country and western song called Obsolete-
Redundant-Retired and Inconsequential. With the money I have in the bank, my
life insurance and my all-paid Kits home I will be most useful to my family
when I am dead.
And so it
goes.
On the Subject of Art
Friday, July 03, 2026
 | | Hosta 'Antioch' 3 July 2026 | In the last few years I have noticed an art form that
is the result of repetition. You might photograph 100 different fire hydrants.
The expression used is one I abhor – to document. Some photographers might take
street shots from the same corner. Another, unnamed, photographs crowds.To illustrate this blog I am placing an unusual
version of my plant scans. I have at least 3000 of them since I started in
2001. For this one I reversed the scan of the hosta flower and made it a
negative.
One of these and perhaps ten more might be seen as
art, But 3000 of them? As it is when people praise my plant photographs they
lose interest the moment I tell them that they are scanographs and that I am a
scanographer.
No gallery in this city gives me the time of day.
Perhaps when I meet my oblivion my scans will stand out from those crowds.
A
Do It Differently
Thursday, July 02, 2026
 | | Karen Gerbrecht | I tell photographers
in this century that they lack the push of pushy art directors and editors from
that past century that made me take photographs in a ways I did not want to
try and invariably they were right.
One of them
Vancouver Magazine art director Rick Staehling (now gone) spent fortunes buying
the best American magazines of the 80s. He would show me a portrait from
Esquire and would tell me, “Alex try doing something like it.”
Few now know
that the first published photograph was one of the Steinway Building in 1873
that appeared in a long gone New York City newspaper. It was possible because
the halftone process (lots of dots) had been invented. That photograph
immediately linked photography with the arts and not long after it began a
competition between magazines and newspapers to publish very good original
work.
Now with
journalism moribund the only good photographs that I see are in my daily
delivered, hard-copy New York Times.
One of the
words often used by art director Staehling and his successor, Chris Dahl was, “Do
it differently.” This involved complex lighting and cameras of multiple formats
or swivel lens panoramics.
The digital
cameras of this century are like the 19th century Colt .45, the
Peacemaker, that put all the people who used them on the same foot.
It was in
that last century that I met an extraordinary violinist, Karen Kerbrecht who
played the instrument in the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. With her we came up
with the idea of avoiding the clichés of a person with their instrument We
called our experiment “the anti-violinist”.
Now that I
have a wide (28 inches) and fabulous Acer monitor I am able to go to any file
and instead of opening I choose browse. I then see all the little pictures in
the file across my screen. When I punched in Karen Gerbrecht I found one that
somehow had escaped my notice. I shot it with a now long gone Polaroid Instant
Negative film. I will perhaps place a couple more.
At a future
date I will do another blog which I will title the Anti-Dancer. I worked with
Lauri Stallings who left Vancouver and has a dance company in Atlanta.
The Redness of Today
Wednesday, July 01, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Emily Carr' & Graham Walker's beautiful design |
Patrick Reid & the Maple Leaf Flag Every day
since Rosemary brought our family from Mexico City in 1975, I have thanked her over and
over. Now with her gone on 9 December 2020, I have not changed that. I think
about her and how I live in a stable country that is free of the animosity in
other countries. Thanks to her financial acumen I don’t have to worry about
where my next Canadian Dollar is coming from.
For years It
seems I was the only person around who knew the story of how the Canadian Maple
Leaf Flag came to be. I was friends with the man responsible in finding a
designer, Jacques St-Cyr, and how the ultimate design, adding an extra leaf
point happened in Patrick Reid’s kitchen. Before he died, when I would spot him
walking in Kerrisdale’s 41st Avenue, I would talk to him marvelling
at the fact that I was chatting with a living flag designer!
Today then, has to be a day full of red. For me there is nothing more symbolic of a BC
Canada Day than my Rosa ‘Emily Carr’. It is a scandal that this rose introduced
in 2007 in Morden, Manitoba is a rose that is hardy in every province in
Canada. And yet, in the Lower Mainland, it is not available. By luck I found it
five years ago at UBC’s Shop in the Garden.
 | | Rosa 'Emily Carr' 1 July 2026 |
Perfection - Nothing Gold Can Stay
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Susan Williams-Ellis' 30 June 2026 | Nothing Gold Can StayRobert Frost – 1874 - 1963
Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
In 1962 I
was going to an American college in Mexico City, Mexico City College. One of my
classes was presided by a man who had been a friend of poet Robert Frost, and
astoundingly he looked like the poet. I was much too ignorant (and stupid) to
appreciate his class so I sat in the back and yawned constantly.
It was only
after I started writing these blogs in 2006 that I started associating my photographs
and plant scans to poets and writers.
Today I saw
this bloom of Rosa ‘Susan Williams-Ellis’ (and English Rose). In all my years
of scanning roses (I may have at least 4000 plant scans) I was struck that this
bloom was perfection. It was perfection even if you note the centre is slightly
yellow and there is a tinge of red in one of the petals.
To make this
perfection even more of a Platonic essence, when I saw the scan on my new (but
used) 28 inch wide Acer monitor, it looked exactly like the rose itself.
I just wish
I could return to that unnamed English Literature professor whose name I long
forgot and tell him that I have found my way.
Catsup
Monday, June 29, 2026
 | Rosa 'Ketchup & Mustard' 30 June 2026
| My memory
has played strange tricks in my years of existence. As an example when I was
born I remember that a photographer with a magnesium flash almost blinded my
entrance into this world.
When I was 8
in 1950 in Buenos Aires we had a live-in housekeeper called Mercedes Bazaldúa. One
morning my mother told her, “Mercedes ve
a la almacén de la esquina y pedí una botella de cátsup.”
Not long
after that we were invited for dinner at the home of my Uncle Harry who was my
father’s older brother. I watched him put sugar into his mixture of Colman’s
Mustard. Since then I always use Coleman’s (also called Keen’s) and I put a bit
of sugar.
Uncle Harry
had been born in Manchester and he and his parents moved to Buenos Aires in
1901. At the time the custom in my family was that the firstborn male would
have the middle name of Waterthouse. When my grandparents and Uncle Harry
arrived to Buenos Aires my father found out that his parents had gotten married
in Buenos Aires. He immediately told himself that his brother was a bastard and
that he, my father George was the true first born. So he started using the name
Waterhouse. When I was born he tried to have the name Waterhouse in my name
George Alexander. At the time names in a foreign language that could be
translated into Spanish, were prohibited to stand in the foreign language. When
my father then insisted on Waterhouse, he slipped a coima (a bribe) an told the registrar that my surname was
Waterhouse-Hayward.
And yes I
eat my French Fries with Catsup.
|