A Life Compressed to Three
Friday, May 22, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Doctor Huey' 22 May 2026 | The Cycles of My Life
I recently
wrote this blog (link above) about cycles and how we all humans go through them and that
they rarely coincide with those of our family and friends.
Today I saw
these three blooms of Rosa ‘Doctor
Huey”. I have written before how this rose is disparaged by keen rosarians as
the good doctor was used as sturdy root stock for grafting on them “better”
roses. Rosemary, before she died, brought the rose from our Kerrisdale lane
garden (before the house and garden were demolished. I told her that we had
never planted a red rose on the lane and explained that a rose had died and Dr.
Huey had then prospered.
In this scan
you can see the rose just about to be past, the second one, really past and the
third on its dying cycle with the petals falling off. If I were to print the
scan the members of the Vancouver Rose Society would not quite understand my
purpose nor would they see the beauty that I see here. It is as if seeing a
compact view of a mature human on their journey to non-existence and oblivion.
Benjamin Britten & Grace Kelly
Thursday, May 21, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Benjamin Britten' 21 May 2026 |
Grace Kelly's Neck
Because my
mother was a snob (good taste) she took me to see films that she liked. That is
how I came to appreciate Joseph Cotten, Lesley Howard, Gregory Peck, Elsa
Lanchester, Audrey Hepburn and (AND) Grace Kelly. By the time I saw her last
film (The Swan in 1956) I had a complete dislike for that man she married in
Monaco.
A couple of
months ago I read Susan Sontag’s posthumously published On Women. In it she
comes to the conclusion that by 1975 (when she wrote the book) women had not
advance much in the world. In a nutshell she wrote that “old men have character
and old women are ugly”. I came to the conclusion that not much has changed now
in 2026.
Social media
is full of photographs that say, “Who is
this lovely young girl who became a famous actress? Now that she is 82 you will
gag as to how she looks.”
Because
Grace Kelly was dear to my heart, I am almost glad that she died before she
might have been photographed and be gagging material.
I was much in
love with my Rosemary all of the 52 years that we lived together. I found her attractive
and we indulged I stuff up until a few months before she died.
I would also
assert that my old wife had lots of character.
In a way
this scan of the lovely Rosa ‘Benjamin
Britten’, one that Rosemary loved reminds me that here is a rose with lots of
character.
A Lens Baby's View of Roses
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
 | | Rosa 'Reine Victoria' Summer of 2001 |
In 1991 my
Rosemary told me, “Alex, tonight we are going to the Vancouver Rose Society
meeting at the Floral Hall at the VanDusen Botanical Garde". A few minutes into
the meeting I told Rosemary, “I am seeing
100 terrible and boring slides of roses and I am sitting on an uncomfortable
chair. Why have you brought me here?” Rosemary persisted and soon I was a
happy rose fan and particularly keen on the interesting story of where roses
came from and the names they were given.
But I vowed
that I would never photograph individual roses and would only photograph the
very nice rose beds of our Kerrisdale garden. Then one hot summer day of 2001 I
found myself bored and I came up with the idea of placing a rose (Rosa ‘Reine Victoria) on my Epson
scanner. Now in 2026 I may have at least 4000 scans of roses and other plants
from my garden.
I firmly
believe that I must show respect to what a rose is. I like to show it with it
leaves. I abhor those macro photographs that isolate roses to the point that
even their leaves are not shown. Rugosa roses have interesting leaves and many
roses have early new shoots and leaves that are brilliantly red. I think that
my scans of roses show that respect I have for their beauty. Rosemary did and
would understand to this day. She would smile of this my first plant scan. And now I must admit that I have photographed roses recently using a device called a LensBaby on my digital camera. The device was given to me by my genius photography friend Jeff Gin who is currently the manager of the Kerrisdale Cameras branch in North Vancouver. I first used the Lensbaby when I went to Venice and Florence with Rosemary. Here is the link below. Venice and the Lensbaby I found a few days ago that by using the Lensbaby and purposely overexposing on a sun drenched roses I achieved something that I really like.
The Cycles of My Life
Monday, May 18, 2026
When I see a
pretty, young (about 23) blonde girl with beautiful legs, at my advanced age of
83, there is no lust in my heart. I see her as I first saw Rosemary in December
of 1967. I smile but think of my loss and that the moment will never return. Rosemary is gone.
In the last
few days I have been reflecting on the idea that we all go through cycles not
quite coinciding with that of our friends and family. A young man with a baby
in device hanging in front of him reminds me that I did that but in the 70s our
daughters where in pack on our backs.
In what may
have been my first awareness of death, it happened when I was five, and taking
a tub bath in Buenos Aires around 1948. I was playing with a little toy and
when my mother drained the tub I forgot about the toy and saw it (too late to
retrieve it) go down the drain. I cried and my mother told me she would get another
one. I shouted back, “I want that one!”
Returning
from my daily (weather permitting) bike ride when I was almost home I spotted
these three dolls which had a sign that said “free”. I immediately thought of
my daughters (now 55 and 58) as little girls and what may have happened to the
toy dolls we bought for them. Would they remember what they were like?
I was
saddened by this cycle and wondered almost as if the dolls were people, if they
know not what their fate might be. If someone takes them home will the little
girl, or girls who get them, think of where they may have come from?
I was raised
as a little boy in Buenos Aires, very much a macho culture, so I was given toy
soldiers and cap pistols to play with. It was when our granddaughters Rebecca
and Lauren were born that I first had the chance to be a man and yet play with
toy dolls. I bought them many of them. Finding little dresses for Rebecca and
Lauren to wear was much like dressing up dolls.
It is
amazing how those three dolls – free - brought me this shower of
autobiographical memories. Sad but happy, too.
An Unpolarized View of Stability
Sunday, May 17, 2026
 | | 16 May 2026 |
When possible even when I feel lazy I go out in my
bike (it has only 3 speeds) and go to Jericho Beach. There is a park on Point
Grey Road where I stop to take a photograph with my Fuji X-E3. When I did so
this day I had two thoughts. The first one is that somehow by underexposing my
shot one stop the sky looks like it has been polarized by having a polarizing
filter. I used to use these filters a lot with film but never with a digital
camera.
That other thought is, of course, of my Rosemary who
brought us from Mexico City in 1975. In a few years, thanks to her forward
vision I became an established photographer and by the 90s I was emulating my
journalist father.
The view of our skyline is far enough that one could
almost (not quite) believe it was that friendly 1975 Vancouver.  | | Easter - Burnaby 1977 |
Julian Barnes - Death & the Lemon Table I have something of those Canadian Monarch Butterflies
and birds that fly south. They guide themselves by locations on the way in
their memory. Like those butterflies and birds wherever I drive in Vancouver I
remember, “I went with Rosemary here.” It is an inescapable thought somehow
connected to the Julian Barnes concept of IAM which stands for Involuntary
Autobiographical Memory. These memories will not stop.
What that means is that I am constantly thanking
Rosemary for her vision and I do not take for granted that I live in a pretty
stable part of the world. I look at the photograph I took of my family in our home in Burnaby at Easter 1977 and I almost smile. It is a moment that will never come back although Jorge Luís Borges had something to say about first times. He said that those exact first times are repeated in our memory ad infinitum. I can only add that few of us (or at least this guy) never did think when I was taking such photographs that I would be looking back at that moment. We anticipate a future of activities but never the future of looking back at a past.
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