Thursday, December 31, 2020

The weather forecaster informed us with the aplomb of certain confidence that we'd have sunshine again in the afternoon. So we were in turn confident that the tight aluminum lid clamped over the sky would lift and we'd have a bright day thereafter. Confidence misplaced; at no time did we see blue sky, much less the sun beaming its beneficent rays down upon us.

Oh, wait, that isn't completely true. As we made our way through the trails in the ravine's forest this afternoon, glancing above the forest canopy we could see off to the west some glimmers of blue, albeit a narrow strip, and we did see the sun briefly tip its brilliant golden crown on this New Year's Eve. You had to be vigilant to capture it's brief presence.


 We should have felt snug in our winter gear as we tramped through the trails, but there was a prevailing chill that probed beneath our jackets and played 'gutcha!' with our too-sensitive chests. The temperature when we left the house stood at 0C, a very reasonable level, given the much colder temperatures of the past three days and the -5 of yesterday with the collaboration of an icy wind.

The good thing about it, though was that yesterday's light, fluffy snow had altered its character, and it now clung to the ice on the trails even though it was clear to see that people slogging through the snow yesterday were vulnerable to slips, their signatures left behind on the glare of the slide-uncovered ice. We had avoided those areas yesterday.


There was no reason to avoid any areas on the trails today and we could stride without hesitation over  the snow-clumped trails now sticking to the ice. We had entered the ravine at half-past three and exited at quarter-to-five and what a difference in  the quality of light from start to finish. Once twilight establishes itself it beckons night's entry to take over the show.



Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Since it was my birthday yesterday we had a dish that I prefer, not one of my husband's favourites. But to my surprise the quiche I baked went down very well with him. It was the green beans that came as a side dish that he didn't care for, which is also unusual for him, he'll usually take them any day over broccoli. We had poached pears for dessert, and quite enjoyed dinner.

Tonight's dinner is more down his alley, so to speak, meatballs in gravy served over steamed rice (now that qualifies as his favourite 'vegetable'), with asparagus on the side and fresh-cut pineapple for dessert. It's only fair, after all, turnabout favourites for our meals. And since I enjoy preparing them all, and have a fairly large range of choices so meals don't get boring, why not? Today is another cold-ish day with a high of -5C, though no wind, and it's been snowing most of the day. Comfort food fits the menu

Earlier in the day when I was doing a deep cleaning of our bathroom upstairs I heard Jackie and Jillie suddenly burst out into a barking fit. Aha! I thought, it must be the ghost-shoveller striking again. It's been snowing all day, and we had some heavy snow in the morning. I hurried over to the top of the stairs and peered down at the porch through the glassed front door. Sure enough the porch had been shovelled and the walkway again, but I was too late to see and identify the altruistic culprit.

From our forays into the backyard with the puppies we knew that it was going to be slippery again in the ravine. Usually, snow falls when it's not too cold out, but it was cold enough today to ensure that the snow was a light fluffy variety that wouldn't stick to the walkways and in the ravine the icy trails that a more moist snow would give improved traction to, wouldn't be in the books today.


With that in mind we set off, well cleated and puppy-booted (the rubber boots help them on ice, but they still tend to slide about a bit) for our afternoon foray in the ravine. From the condition of the trails, well trodden, it was obvious that a little bit of cold and snow wasn't going to keep trail regulars off their game.


It is undeniably beautiful when snow falls steadily, even though it brings an earlier dusk into the forest interior. Our jacket hoods and shoulders began accumulating snow and we soon became acquainted with the fact that our assumptions were quite correct; the icy trails remained icy, and that was obvious enough by the signs here and there that people's stride had taken them into a long slide. 

We took our time, watched for the signs of hidden icy patches that would reveal themselves swiftly enough if anyone strode ahead with confidence, and had no spills ourselves. We keep checking to see that the cleats remain intact over our boot soles. When they slip off you don't always notice; awareness often sets in with the realization that you've lost one somewhere along the trail. Deep snow will do that.

When we crossed the last of the bridges and prepared to haul ourselves up the last of the hills to street level we met up with two neighbours striding with care toward us, on their way into the ravine.They had, in fact, just completed a circuit and should have been heading home but one of them suddenly saw she was minus one of her pair of cleats and they had turned back in the hope of finding it. That's happened to us. Sometimes they turn up, sometimes they don't.

Trail-walking etiquette has it that if an object is found on the trails, whoever finds it hangs it on a branch overhanging the trail where anyone who passes is certain to see it,whether it's a toque, sunglasses, scarf, doggy boot, or cleats, so the owner can gratefully recover it. Sometimes that works, sometimes it fails to.

Soon as we got home Jackie and Jillie clamoured for their cauliflower treat, and I set about preparing dinner. All's well with our little world.



Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Last night on the cusp of midnight when I 'officially' turned 84, my husband unveiled the latest birthday card he made for me. Not a typical birthday 'card' by any measure. He thought this year he'd make it with stained glass, since he had everything handy in his workshop anyway, working on a stained glass window. So he produced a small still-life of fruit in a bowl on a table (all fairly notional), and etched his message to me on the glass.

He actually wanted to give it to me days before. He just cannot keep things from me, but I persuaded him that I'd like him to wait, and so he did. It bothers him that he was unable to rush out at will and shop around for a gift for me, but I persuaded him yet again that it was more important to me that he not expose himself unnecessarily with the coronavirus running rampant, and stay at home. He's given me so may gifts of jewellery and other things over the years I hardly need, much less want anything more. It's not a new argument, but it is one he acceded to this year.

We rose early this morning, anxious to avoid the crush of shoppers we encountered last week. We arrived at the supermarket just a few minutes after eight. Even though the morning proceeds as it usually does; my husband takes Jackie and Jillie out to the backyard when we first come downstairs and I begin setting the table for breakfast and we take our time doing everything before leaving. Including doling out little pieces of cheese to the puppies to tide the pups over until breakfast on our return, they know that this morning is different.

And when we haul out our winter jackets and boots preparatory to leaving, they go into a state of deep mourning. Beginning with pleading whines, escalating to yowls. Heartbreaking, really. What a pair! But we're heartless and off we go leaving them to pine in our so-brief absence. And when we return a long leisurely breakfast ensues. This morning after their doggy breakfast enlivened with melon and chicken, they shared a hard-boiled egg between them.

It was an extremely cold morning, particularly after yesterday's high of 2C. But a sunny day, lighting up and warming the house interior through the windows. When we prepared to take the puppies out to the ravine for their afternoon ramble it was -8C, with a nasty, stiff wind, negating the effect of the sun. But off we trotted, all well geared for the cold.

Apart from the first hill we descend into the ravine, the next hill we encountered played host to a group of young children enjoying themselves sliding and slithering downhill. Accommodated by the fact that a thin layer of ice glazed what was left of the snow that fell early yesterday morning. As yesterday progressed however, it became warmer as afternoon arrived and the snow began melting. Overnight a snap freeze-up entered the atmosphere and froze whatever snow was left, leaving that ice layer, transforming the melting snow and the slick of meltwater into sheer ice.

Not much of a problem for us wearing cleats over our boots, but a dilemma for people coming in who were unfamiliar with the ravine, the forest trails and what to expect under such weather circumstances. People taking mincing steps, slowly and gingerly feeling their way along, grasping tree trunks and branches for equilibrium. As the parents of the three children we saw whooping it up on the hillside were doing, and others we saw as we made our way through the trails.

When we arrived back home it was time to relax again. Though he had worked downstairs in his workshop in the morning, my husband decided the rest of the day deserved to be treated like a holiday. Which means indulging in reading, and listening to lectures on his mini-laptop. While I indulged Jackie and Jillie with cut-up pieces of cauliflower they crave as afternoon treats.

And then starting to put together the constituentts of dinner. We're having a quiche tonight. With green beans on the side, and poached pears for dessert. I made the pastry dough, grated cheddar cheese into it, scattered chopped green onions over, covered it and refrigerated it at this point. Before dinner I'll add the green peas I'm defrosting and beat the eggs and milk that will comprise the filling, and all will be done.

I've fielded birthday calls and emails, and I'm ready for complete relaxation myself, back to reading the newspapers. Happy birthday, me!



Monday, December 28, 2020

We live in an incorporated jurisdiction formerly termed a suburb of Ottawa, called Orleans, now just part of the enlarged Ottawa capital city area. The street our house is located on is quite short, no more than say 40 houses, half on either side. The residents are now likely fifty percent or so retired. There aren't many young children in those family homes, but some.

If anyone ever doubted that Canada is a country of immigrants a glance at the residents of this street might convince them otherwise. Likely fifty percent, perhaps more, of the residents are first-generation Canadian. Which is to say they were born elsewhere, then came to Canada to become Canadian citizens. My husband and I are second-generation; it was our parents who were born outside Canada and then arrived here to make a life for themselves and their children born here. Our children are third-generation Canadians.

On this street live people originally from France, Hong Kong, Poland, Bangladesh, Russia, India, Egypt, Syria and Britain. There are also residents who were born in other provinces of Canada who moved to Ottawa from Nova Scotia and Quebec. And there may be others of whom we know little. Other than that they're our neighbours with whom we share a community, all part of the same nation. There are also those who out-migrate. When we first moved into our house thirty years ago, the couple who owned the house directly across from us were Black Canadians, but after a decade, they who were the first to welcome us to the street, moved to the United States with their two boys to take up an irresistible employment offer.

We know some of these people in a personal way, some with friendships that go back decades, others just slightly, in passing, as it were. Although quite a few of our neighbours are  retired, we're beyond doubt the oldest of the people who live on the street now. One neighbour older than us married to a younger woman, now lives in a personal care/retirement home in the greater community, while his wife continues to live in their house.

Newer residents who have moved into houses that the original owners have sold to move elsewhere, usually in 'down-sizing', tend to be more reserved as neighbours, less comfortable in being friendly with others, or perhaps just so busy in their private lives they cannot spare a smile or a greeting. People of immigrant stock, on the other hand, don't tend to be among those that prefer to withdraw from any vestige of neighbourliness.

When we've been in dire straits, some of our neighbours have felt moved to lend us their emotional support, their time and their energy to help us in a time of need. We're not in that position now, everything is fine with us. But we discovered today that someone has taken it upon themselves to shovel out our house walkways and our porch after snow has fallen. We hadn't noticed it before. Strange, that.

But whenever we've had snow fall, the weather has turned very mild, melting the snow, making it difficult for us to realize that before the snow melted it had been shovelled. I had put out some shelled walnuts on the porch this morning for a little red squirrel that often comes around. I had seen it earlier in the morning, looking about on the porch. Later I looked out to see whether the squirrel had claimed the nuts.

What I observed is that the nuts were covered with snow, snow that had been shovelled under the seating arrangement on the porch where I had left the nuts. I looked again and finally understood that some good soul had taken it upon themselves to do our shovelling. Who it might be eludes us, but surely in time we'll discover who it is and thank them for their generosity of spirit.


Fresh snow fell this morning, not a lot, about 4 cm. And before breakfast my husband shovelled out the back, but didn't bother with the front. The temperature quickly rose under heavily clouded skies that cast a dark atmosphere over the landscape. That deep dusk remained with us the entire day. When we cast ourselves off for a ravine hike in the afternoon it was still dark and soon to become darker, nearing four in the afternoon. Late, because it takes me many hours to clean the house, wash the floors, do the dusting.


 had put a half turkey breast into the oven under a very low heat before we left, potatoes arrayed around it in a large casserole dish. So we could take our time ambulating through the forest trails. And we did, though we decided on a shorter circuit than usual. When we returned home, it was to total darkness. Second-by-second, things are being reversed; we already passed the shortest day of the year and daylight hours are beginning to increase ... incrementally.



Sunday, December 27, 2020

It's without doubt an age thing, casting your mind back subconsciously into your memory banks, dredging up thoughts that surprise you by their seeming inconsequentiality in your life. But if you remembered them, as slight of meaning as they seem to be, perhaps they're not as limited in meaning as you believe even if you have difficulty intellectually grasping how they could be in any way relevant enough to be recalled.

Memories of yourself as a child, feeling lonely and wishing for a friend, someone who would want to be with you, someone you could confide anything to, someone who would always be at your side. My parents moved their little family consisting of me, around age five and a baby sister four years younger to a flat on the second story of a family home on Manning Avenue in Toronto. Across the street was a school I would attend. And up the street lived a family that befriended my parents.

That family owned their own home and behind the house was a small brick, one-story purpose-built factory that produced seltzer water and soft drinks in large bottles. Which meant that family was well off compared to mine. There were five girls in the family ranging in age from their late 20s to five. I can still recall their names; Mary, Lily, Esther, Gertrude and Yetta. Even as a child I was aware of who 'Mary' was, the mother of Jesus.

And I belonged to a tribe of people who were "Christ killers", a lesson I learned at an early age on the street. So I felt it strange that a Jewish woman was named Mary. Eventually I discovered that my mother's sister whom I had always known as 'Munya' was also named Mary. I recall that both the younger sisters hated their names; Gertrude and Yetta. Yetta renamed herself Annette and was furious if she was ever called Yetta.

I wanted her to be my friend, but she was lukewarm about the proposal, though we did on occasion play together. I was left to yearn for that elusive 'best friend'. I had few toys, but I did have a few books and I immersed myself in reading, joining the public library. I was embarrassed at school and jealous of the nice clothes and shoes other girls wore; mine were mostly second-hand outgrown by the children of my parents' friends.

 Eventually my parents moved years later to Brunswick Avenue and a house of their own. I found a friend, more privileged than me, but a friend. Whose mother took her to ballet lessons. I was still lonely, and yet never felt quite comfortable in the company of others.

I discovered there was such a thing as social cliques, where some people were ostracized and others welcomed, where people spoke about you in your absence, where those you thought were your friends might not actually be your friends. And then, by the time I turned fourteen I found that friend. I never wanted to be around anyone else. And 70 years later we've remained friends.

He and I took our two little dogs out this afternoon for their usual hike through the forest trails in the ravine. Earlier in the day he proposed giving me my birthday card, though my birthday is still two days' off. He's like that; not only can he not keep anything from me, if he has something, he wants to immediately share it with me.


 We compromised; he'll give me this year's birthday card -- he's obviously pleased with it, and worked on it for the last few days downstairs in his workshop when I assumed he was working on the latest stained glass panel -- on Monday evening, when we go upstairs to bed, presumably around midnight when it will officially be my 84th birthday.

It's been another cold day, but not as windy as yesterday, so though the atmosphere was chilly at -4C, it was tolerable. We're still waiting for some serious snowfalls. The light layer of snow that followed two days of pouring rain on Friday and Saturday will fade fast despite the cold, if nothing is added to it, and then the landscape will look even darker.


 As it was, we didn't leave the house till shortly after three. I'd been busy all day, and wanted to put on a soup to start cooking before we left. One of my favourite soups; lentil-tomato. And instead of croissants I planned to use the same dough, rolled out as for croissant, but flat, at my husband's request, to accommodate the smoked salmon he'll be eating with it.


 

In the ravine dusk had already fallen, and we knew it wouldn't be long before it turned into the dark of impending night. We met some friends along the way and they regaled us with their super-terrific Christmas dinner shared with their daughter and their four very young grandchildren.

As for that memory of the five girls in the family that lived across from where my family did when I was quite young. It was without doubt spurred by my having come across a photograph of our wedding. There was I in a wedding gown. The gown was Gertrude's, lent out to me. I look busty in it and it's not me because I am much slighter than the person for whom the gown was meant.  


 

Saturday, December 26, 2020


 Saturday's a day-off for us. Nothing much has to be done, everything's already been looked after; our day of rest. So we can do anything we like without a prompting of a little guilt-imp inside our heads. Or do nothing at all. Last night's meal preparations kind of sapped me of an interest in doing much in the kitchen today. Going to make a cream of asparagus soup and sandwiches for dinner tonight; that's it, with grapes for dessert.

The tortierre came out fine. I just didn't like it much, myself. I was happy, though, that my husband ate it and liked it and in fact ate more than he usually does for dinner. I was less enthusiastic. It was the thyme. For some odd reason the smell of thyme hasn't thrilled me one whit of late. I've always used it in cooking and liked it, but I no longer do. I had put a very small amount of thyme into the meat pie filling when I was cooking it, reasoning it would lend a bit of savoury appeal alongside the sage and onion and garlic, salt and pepper and the tiniest amount of cloves. All I could smell when I cut the pie was thyme; strangely sharp and sour.

As for the apple strudel, I was willing enough to make it when my husband suggested it, and it was in fact fun putting it together, but after I ate it for dessert last night, I recalled why it was that such a long time had passed since I'd last baked a strudel. Again, my husband ate his with gratifying enthusiasm, but I found it much less taste-intriguing than he did. Somehow, it lacked the baking virtuosity I recall in my aunt's version of the Vienna-inspired dessert treat. Well, that's life.

Truth is, I bake and I cook with my husband's taste in mind for the most part, and when he's pleased and given to eating and appreciating what's put before him at the dinner table, I feel fulfilled. There are certain things he dislikes that we also have in our diet and he usually makes an effort to eat them but without much enthusiasm; the list is long, but includes broccoli (he ate it in a stir-fry last week), avocado, green onion, cucumber, macaroni (yet he enjoys spaghetti), and so on. But he will eat cauliflower, asparagus, squash, and eggs in any form at all (with the odd exception of quiche, a favourite of mine}, so I have no (few) complaints.


Dawdling about this morning through the house I took a few photographs; sketches my husband produced 50 years ago of two of our children when they were young. Photographs of when we were young. Some of the artwork hanging on our walls. Jackie, following me about querying in his inimitable way when I would stop putzing about and get us all out for a stroll through the forest trails?

No point waiting for the day to warm up a bit. We've been plunged back into winter; -6C first thing this morning, after plus-4C yesterday, and teeming rain. Some light snow fell this morning, about two cm-worth which at least has covered the landscape with a bright, white coverlet on a windy, overcast day. I finished writing a long email to our granddaughter, my husband emerged from his workshop, and we hauled rubber boots over two little dogs' feet and set off.

The temperature was in fact, falling. When we set out it was -7C, and with the wind whipping about felt even colder. In the forest, sightlines now offer us light layers of snow over everything protruding from mother Earth. The creek at the bottom of the ravine is flush with two days of rain, running wide, muddy and noisily downstream heading for the Ottawa River. Jackie and Jillie are straining at the leash, serious about their employment as sled dogs with the mistaken idea that we're sleds.

It's Boxing Day. People are at home, released from two days of unrelenting rain, anxious to get out with their children, young ones still at home, and older ones visiting for the weekend. For quite a while we see no one else out on the trails and the outing is as usual, a super-pleasant perambulation through newly-snowed trails, the forest floor nicely bright with white despite the heavy overcast. And then our elevation changes as we clamber uphill and then uphill again to reach the forest plateau.

There, on a network of trails, people are out, released from home interiors into the wide open spaces of the out-of-doors, breathing the fresh air accentuated by frigid temperatures so everyone is well bundled against the cold, many walking their companion dogs, others walking their house companions. Everyone without exception seems happy and contented with life, among them perhaps some who have been personally touched by loss or illness due to COVID.

When we're on the home stretch of our circuit after an hour's striding through the trails, my fingers through my thick, double-walled mittens begin to freeze. Thre are areas on the trails that are ice-slick and require some careful manoeuvring around. Jackie and Jillie seem impervious to the cold, their little legs pumping purposefully like pistons, their tiny orange boots keeping rhythm with the cadence of their trot. Such tiny creatures, yet such strength, both of purpose and physical, in hauling us through the trails....



Friday, December 25, 2020


Just as well we had decided yesterday morning to get out early before the rain began. It hasn't since stopped, a day and a half later. At that time yesterday morning there was still snow left on the ground, on rooftops and throughout the ravine. Now there is nothing left. And a Christmas Day without snow is just simply unCanadian. So much for Ottawa's reputation as representing the third snowiest, coldest capital in the world.

Toronto, on the other hand, and much of southern Ontario, is uncharacteristically colder this day than eastern Ontario. And they've more snow than I would warrant they really want to have. When we came downstairs this morning for breakfast a glance out the front door informed us unequivocally that this would not be an outdoor day for Jackie and Jillie, much less for us. 

It was raining, heavily, but more than that, the atmosphere was in deep fog. Actually, fog is beautiful to look at, but at this time of year if fog is to appear it's usually an ice fog that leaves a coating of ice on trees as it withdraws which can be exquisitely lovely to behold. Instead, as it dissipated, more rain fell, more heavily.

Jackie and Jillie prefer indoor days when this kind of weather presents. They snooze and they play about, challenging one another to zip about from one end of the house to the other. Because there are two of them, small siblings, they have company in their misery, only they don't think they're miserable as long as they can anticipate meals on time. (Jackie just came over as I was writing this to remind me I had forgotten their afternoon cauliflower treat.)


 M
y husband helped me clean up the kitchen, drying the breakfast dishes, then he did the Friday morning quick vacuuming, and headed downstairs to his workshop. He's likely making a birthday card for me for my birthday next week, but ostensibly he's working on  his glass windows. We had yesterday or the day before discussed what he'd like to have for dinner today. Turkey was out since we had it on Monday.

First, he reminisced about strudel, that I haven't made one in quite awhile, and I haven't. So I decided that we'd have strudel for dessert for this evening. When I was a child I used to watch my mother's older sister in her kitchen when I had the opportunity. I was fascinated by her so very obvious efficient comfort in a kitchen with her voluminous pantry never short of ingredients, preparing all manner of exotic meals and scrumptious desserts. Viennese-style strudel was one of her many specialties.


 It also occurred to my husband that we haven't had a tortierre yet this winter. That's a traditional French-Canadian meat pie that is usually served on Christmas Eve in French homes. I wondered if that wouldn't be too much in the way of pastry, since it's a pie and requires a top and a bottom pastry crust, and the strudel too is a rolled pasty. My husband waved away my doubts and I decided to proceed.


First the dough for the strudel which has to rest for an hour after it's been kneaded into a soft ball. I cubed apples, cut up glace cherries, added raisins and pecans, cinnamon, brown sugar, butter and graham crumbs for the filling, then rolled out the strudel pastry. And rolled and rolled, though I could have rolled forever and made the resulting casing twice the size and consequently thinner. As it was it was semi-transparent, so I filled it, rolled it and baked it.

I've prepared the filling for the meat pie, which means I only have to make the pastry dough to assemble the pie and bake it just before dinner. We might as well please our gustatory aesthetic on such days, and forget the gloom outside. And hope that by tomorrow the rain will finally come to an end, freeing us up for a fresh-air round through the forest trails in the ravine. And maybe even hope for a snowy day.