Rosemary's Hellebores & Camellia x williamsii 'Donation'
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
 | | Hellebores 4 February 2026 |
The hellebores ( I can only name three of them) are middle top, Helleborus 'Wedding Crasher', right, niddle yellow, Helleborus 'Wedding Crasher' and bottom right, Helleborus 'Honeymoon Blue'.  | | Camellia x williamsii 'Donation' - 4 February 2026 |
My garden
that until five years ago used to be our garden is a constant repository of
memories of Rosemary that I cannot escape and do not want to escape. If she is
not going to be around in bodily form, being with her memories in my head is a
distant second best.
Today it was
an overwhelming delight of flowers that when nothing blooms in February were
out in force. There were five of her hellebores and her most favourite camellia,
Camellia x williamsii ‘Donation. This camellia came from our old garden in
Kerrisdale.
Because I
was a sort of second-best kind of gardener it was Rosemary who insisted
something interesting should be noticed all year, even in cold winter months.
Hellebores
are not difficult to grow. You do not have to fuss over them as I might with my
old roses.
There is one
unfortunate fact. I have plant labels for only three of the five hellebores. At
one time I would have been most upset. Now I realize that just enjoying them
and having some to scan is all I need on a sunny Wednesday evening.
I feel good
today as I was able to go on my bike on my hour cycling to Jericho Beach. Then
I went to Safeway in that bike and purchased a very thick $35 steak and some
red peppers to barbecue. Even though I am an Argentine (and certainly not a
vegan) I rarely eat meat these days. It was a feast and I then cut up into
little pieces some of what was left and my Niño and Niña enjoyed them.
All in all a
fine day that I shared with my cats and with my memory of my Rosemary.
Rosemary without Mayonaisse
Monday, February 02, 2026
The Great Expectations of Judy Brown In 1964
while going to Mexico City College I feel for a short blonde called Judy Brown.
She was coldish but did pose for some photographs. In those days Agfa made a
very fast film called Isopan Record. I decided I would photograph her with the
light of match. It worked out well. The school year ended and I never saw Brown
again.
There is
something about photography that somehow it allows one (me) to relive past
moments of my life. I can scan Brown negatives (I have them to this day) and
write a couple of blogs showing the match photographs.
But even
better I can try the technique many years later and even modify the technique.
In the last few weeks I have been writing blogs that feature photographs that I
took of Rosemary in Mexico City in 1969. She was nude and I cropped for my
sense of family good taste.
I found (I
had forgotten) three shotsm where unlike Brown, she is holding a candle. Because
this century has the bonus of me being able to combine the technology of the
last century (the b+w negs I took of Rosemary)
with the technique of putting one negative on top of the other and then
scanning them with my Epson V700. I call these scanner negative sandwiches
without mayonnaise. The trick is to pick negs from the same session.
I believe
that I have done well with the scans here. But I cannot escape that feeling
when I look at the scans on my monitor that I am back to Mexico City 1969 in
our little apartment on Calle Herodoto. This is when Rosemary would serve me
fine meals and she had nothing on her plate. I was too stupid to realize that
we had little money so she was only splurging on me. And how would I have known that 57 years later I would be writing this blog and using those negatives. They are in perfect condition since I always overwashed my negatives for archival permanence.
Time at a Standstill With Brother Cyriac Haden C.S.C.
Sunday, February 01, 2026
 | | I February 2026 | Linear Time
Reloj according to the RAE (Real Academia Española : Del
cat. ant. relotge, este del lat. horologĭum 'reloj de arena’, ‘reloj de sol’, ‘clepsidra', y este del gr. ὡρολόγιον hōrológion.
I have
written many times about my relationship with time. Here (above) is one of the blogs.
And I have also written in repeated time how Jorge Luís Borges wrote that all
first times are infinitely repeated as first times.
Today I thought
I might add a bit about time and me as I was looking at my watch. In Spanish
there are no two individual words watch and clock. Both are reloj (plural
relojes) and my wrist watch is a reloj de pulsera. My watch is a Timex (made in
the Philippines that I purchased for $50.00 at the Bay in 1986. Since then all
I have done to keep it going is to change the battery every two years. I never
take it off either when I swim or when I am in my hot tub bath.
The watch
today made me remember Brother Cyriac Haden, C.S.C. who taught me algebra and
chemistry in the late 50 at St. Edward’s High School in Austin. He had
discipline problems so we made his classes probably unhappy for him. In one of
his classes it was the one before lunch. I would stare at the large clock
behind him and it seemed that time stood still. Such was our treatment of him
that when I returned years later to a class reunion I went to the campus
Assumption Cemetery and apologized at his grave.  | | Brother Cyriac Haden, C.S.C. |
Now in this
century I wake up early to fed my two cats and to make my breakfast-in-bed on a
tray. I do stuff during the day (nothing important) and before I know it I am
turning off the light to sleep. I am wondering if I can change this or if I
want to change this speeding of time.
Brother
Cyriac might have some ideas.
Never to Be Seen
Saturday, January 31, 2026
 | | Rosemary and Niña after she died December 2020 |
When my Rosemary died on 9 December 2020 we were
waiting for the funeral people to turn up. It was then when I decided that I
was compelled to take the most difficult photograph of my life because I was a
photographer. I went upstairs. Rosemary was dead on our bed with our female cat Niña on her chest. I told myself that nobody was ever going to see that photograph.
Today 31 January, 2026 I thought that perhaps I should
look at the photograph. I went to my Family files and I did not find it.
Perhaps it is in our Cats - All our Cats file. It was not there. There were many
photographs of Rosemary’s hands once she had died but not the one I was looking
for.
When I place my Fuji X-E3 photographs into my files
they have a Fuji number. Once I open the photograph, size it and then name it
then I can use my search tool to find it. That was the case. I looked for the unnamed
files and found that I had taken two photographs. I size and fixed one of them
which then matched the image I had seen before I pressed my camera’s shutter.
I have found the photograph and the extra one. Will
anybody ever see it besides me?
A Smiling Sadness
Friday, January 30, 2026
 | | Rosemary Elizabeth Healey Waterhouse-Hayward - 1969 |
The more I
look at the many portraits I have taken of Rosemary since we met around 15
December, 1967, the more I am struck of that unique smile of hers that conveyed
a deep sadness. Our eldest daughter Alexandra inherited what I would definitely
call a talent. My mother wasn’t always a happy person. She had too many worries
as a single mother once my father left home in Buenos Aires in 1950. I
inherited most of her books and one of them is by Khalil Gibran. It is thus
appropriate that I can include this poem accompanied by a string of contact
sheet portraits of Rosemary with different degrees of smiling sadnesses. Or
could that be sad smilings?
A Tear And A
Smile - l Khalil Gibran
I would not
exchange the sorrows of my heart
For the joys
of the multitude.
And I would
not have the tears that sadness makes
To flow from
my every part turn into laughter.
I would that
my life remain a tear and a smile.
A tear to
purify my heart and give me understanding
Of life's
secrets and hidden things.
A smile to
draw me nigh to the sons of my kind and
To be a
symbol of my glorification of the gods.
A tear to
unite me with those of broken heart;
A smile to
be a sign of my joy in existence.
I would
rather that I died in yearning and longing
than that I live weary and despairing.
I want the
hunger for love and beauty to be in the
Depths of my
spirit,for I have seen those who are
Satisfied
the most wretched of people.
I have heard
the sigh of those in yearning and longing, and it is sweeter than the sweetest
melody.
With
evening's coming the flower folds her petals
And sleeps,
embracing her longing.
At morning's
approach she opens her lips to meet
The sun's
kiss.
The life of
a flower is longing and fulfilment.
A tear and a
smile.
The waters
of the sea become vapor and rise and come
Together and
are a cloud.
And the
cloud floats above the hills and valleys
Until it
meets the gentle breeze, then falls weeping
To the
fields and joins with brooks and rivers to return to the sea, its home.
The life of
clouds is a parting and a meeting.
A tear and a
smile.
And so does
the spirit become separated from
The greater
spirit to move in the world of matter
And pass as
a cloud over the mountain of sorrow
And the
plains of joy to meet the breeze of death
And return
whence it came.
To the ocean
of Love and Beauty----to God.
Fading into Oblivion
Thursday, January 29, 2026
 | | 29 January 2026 |
Pleasure in Failure Today 29
January 2026 I managed to inform the Telus people by talking to a pleasant man
from Guatemala that I had a new credit card to replace the one that is
inspiring February 1st. I managed to pay (in person) my house insurance. After
that I came home and settled on the bed with my two cats. I stared at the
ceiling and did some thinking.
That
thinking involves my inability to accept after Rosemary’s death on 9 December
2020 that she is not with me occupying her side of the bed. Everything in the
house, the dishware, the pictures on the wall, what we bought when we were in
Mexico all associate my thoughts with her. When Niña and Niña stare at me I
immediately remember how she cuddled them. They connect me to her.
It would
seem that my association and grief is not going to fade. This is why I decided
to scan these hosta leaves on which I had placed a b+w transparency of Rosemary
with Alexandra between glass and exposed it all to summer sun for 4 hours. I
learned this from my friend Ralph Rinke. He did warn me that the result of UV
light reacting with chlorophyll was not a permanent. I immediately scanned the
results, printed them and then framed them with UV protection glass.
I saw these
faded hosta leaves. The action of scanning them and seeing them as they are I
believe prepares me for my eventual (soon perhaps) fading from this world where
I will then join Rosemary in oblivion. Both she and I knew we would never see
each other again.
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