Some White Rosemary Cuties on Her Birthday
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Rosemary's little things
Ipheion
uniflorum is a species of flowering plant, related to the onions, placed in the
allium subfamily (Allioideae) of the Amaryllidaceae. It is known by the common
name springstar, or spring starflower. Along with all species of the genus
Ipheion, some sources place it in the genus Tristagma, but research published
in 2010 suggested that this is incorrect. It is native to Argentina and
Uruguay, but is widely cultivated as an ornamental and reportedly naturalized
in Great Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand and the United States. Wikipedia
Every day
that I walk through my garden that used to be our garden, I cannot escape the
presence of my Rosemary. She first planted Ipheion uniflorum around our round
rose bed in our former garden in Kerrisdale. She certainl must have brought
some them as they are happily growing in my lane garden. This flower and
Verbena bonariensis were plants she knew grew in my Argentina. This was the
kind of woman that Rosemary was.
I was going
to scan ipheions yesterday in the
afternoon but I had forgotten that they are light sensitive and are only open
full at about noon.
And because
I can, since today was Rosemary’s birthday I could not resist including in my
scan a favourite portrait (taken with my Pentacon-F that had a self-timer) of
us in our home in Mexico City in the early 70s.
And of course Rosemary would have known as I only now just found out that the underside of the Ipheion is as lovely as its top side.
A Pleasant Blooming Surprise
Saturday, April 18, 2026
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| Rosa sericea ssp omiensis var pteracantha 18 April 2026 |
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| Back Lane Garden - Rosa sericea, etc on far right 18 April 2026 |
Rosa sericea ssp omiensis var pteracantha April 24 2025
It may be an
old fashioned expression of mine that is sexist when I say that roses like
women are full of surprises.
Today 18
April 2026 my Rosa sericea ssp omiensis f. pteracantha is in bloom. Like
clockwork, this species rose which is the only one that has only four petals,
always bloomed on May 1st then it all began to change.
Could it be
global warming?
Kumtuks in an Age of Untruths & the Connaught Bridge
Friday, April 17, 2026
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When I was living in Mexico in the 60s and 70s there was a
lovely boulevard in the Mexico City neighbourhood of Churubusco called La
Taxqueña. The local government decided to change the name to Avenida Miguel
Ángel de Quevedo. Most people insisted on calling the avenue by its real name
including the most important taxi drivers.
Michael Stephen and Sam Sullivan
I will
associate the above with a lovely lunch I had (and distinguished guests) at the
Terminal City Club yesterday hosted by former mayor Sam Sullivan and his wife
Lynn Zanatta. Sullivan and a few important friends have started an organization
called Kumtuks (and Indigenous word that means wisdom/knowledge). Its purpose
it to find a middle road between extremes that argue as to who is right and or
saying the real truth. The plan is to make videos to promote the ideas in
social media and relevant media.
 John Bonnett
The speakers
were Michael Stephen, John Bonnett,Yuta Shimizu,Margareta Dogval,Geoff Russs
and Mark Milke. The first two caught my interest and in particular Michael
Stephen. He read from many books, quotes that Joseph Trutch, 1st Lieutenant
Governor of British Columbia, in office 5 July 1871 – 27 June 1876 was not the
villainous man we have been led to believe. It seems that all those bad things
happened after he was out of office and then dead. Stephen peaked my interest, as I live in Kits on 7th Avenue almost corner with what was formerly
called Trutch. I asked my neighbours about the name change. Because my
neighbour friends all live on 7th they all told me, “Alex we are lucky that
we live on 7th as the name change will affect the property documents
of all those who used to live on Trutch. Yuta Shimizu will bring his expertise in the making of the videos
The second
speaker", John Bonnet is a teacher and instructor and his attempts to teach
truths are sometimes most unpopular. His motto from George Gershwin is “It
ain’t necessarily so.”
I spoke with
him and told him of my problems teaching at an American High School in Mexico
City in the early 70s. In one class, Ancient History, one day I told my class
that the Israelites since they had lived by force in Egypt for some years,
Herodotus had revealed that perhaps the Israelites had adopted the Egyptian
custom of circumcision. I then asked a Jewish student to stand up and to give
us a clinical definition of the term. On the next day I was summoned to the office
of the female principal who was a member of the right-wing organization
Daughters of the American Revolution. She told me that she had heard that I was
teaching sex in my Ancient History Class. I was told to stop and to no longer
include Herodotus in my course.
I will not
go here to all the stuff circulating in Canada and in our province that is
really not all that true. But I would like to add how it is that in Latin America
we deal with the “Columbus Problem”. Columbus Day South of the Río Bravo is
called El Día de la Raza. October 12 celebrates the fact that the intermarriage
between Spaniards and Indigenous Peoples produced a new race – the mestizos.
But now Columbus statues are being torn down.
Few know why
Frida Kahlo had a moustache. The Indigenous Peoples of Mexico don’t usually
have body hair except on their head and down there. Kahlo wanted to show off
that she had lots of Spanish blood. While in Mexico in the 50s and 60s I saw
women with lovely legs in fishnets. Their legs were unshaved. They were
boasting.
I wish Sam
Sullivan’s organization lots of luck in order for them to set the records
straight. In our age of extreme polarization this is a necessary task. For me the new Patullo Bridge will be the New Pattullo Bridge. This is because I am old fashioned. The Cambie Street Bridge for me will always be the Connaught Bridge.
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