anything at all

May 22, 2004


A nasty upper respiratory infection kept me home from the beach yesterday and is keeping me home from nowhere I was going to be going anyway today.

I'm almost finished with reading Jinriksha Days in Japan finally. It's a slow read because it has no narrative thread whatsover, well, except for the part where she climbs Mt. Fuji and gets caught in a storm. It's essentially a series of prose sketches of places. The descriptions are highly visual and richly detailed, almost like looking at a painting. It finally occurred to me to look up Scidmore on the web and lo and behold I found out she was a photographer for National Geographic. That explains the intense visualness of her stories. I don't recommend reading the vivid description of eating bits of flesh off a live carp with chopsticks at bed time though. Not unless you want to have nightmares involving twitching carp. OK, that's the only really gross and disturbing section. My favorite section, and the reason I bought the book in the first place, is the one where she goes to a bunraku performance and describes not only how they do some of the puppet special effects but also what each member of her party ate as snacks and how much each item cost. I felt like I'd been to the theater with her.

I'm simultaneously reading Bernd Heinrich's latest, The Geese of Beaver Bog. My favorites of his are Ravens in Winter and The Trees in My Forest. If this one is half as good as those, it will prove quite satisfying. Geese seem an unlikely subject for him, but it turns out a gosling imprinted on him and that got him interested in their lives.

Between reading and drinking tea to try to decongest my sinuses, I am also eating beet soup, which I made yesterday. One of the problems with cooking for one is that you can't just buy one beet with its greens. So I bought a bunch of the most gorgeous beets at the market yesterday along with some plum tomatoes and turned them into a huge pot of beet soup using a new recipe I read in the latest issue of Martha Stewart Living. Me reading the domestic goddess magazine? Well,I bought it specifically because it has an article about beets, along with several beet recipes. Beets are fabulous vegetables because they simulatneously appeal to my craving for root vegetables and my craving for leafy greens. Anyway, this recipe is decidedly un-borscht-like as it uses cumin and coriander to give it a vaguely Indian taste. It also includes the greens. The recipe called for cayenne pepper to taste and when I tasted it I decided it really needed Eros Pista, which I still have a little bit of in a jar in my fridge. With a little bit of Brown Cow plain yogurt on top, this is one satisfying incarnation of beet soup. And there's plenty left over because one bunch of beets makes enough soup to eat it for every meal for a couple of days. I don't know if the NIH has studied the effects of beet soup on upper respiratory infections, but it's at least as efficacious as chicken soup and a whole lot tastier and vegetarian.

I'm also treating the upper respiratory infection with hot lemon and honey just like La Madre used to give us when we had colds as kids. I bought a bag of lemons so I can administer this cure several times a day. Basically I roll the lemon around on the counter top for several minutes to loosen it up, then juice it by hand on one of those old fashioned juicer things, add about a cupful of almost boiling water and a teaspoon of honey and drink it. Nancy insists this is a Mexican cold remedy because she first encountered when she studied Spanish in Mexico as a teeanger. I have no idea where it originated but I remember drinking it as a small child in Massachusetts nowhere near Mexico.

 I've had whatever this is since Tuesday but it didn't really cause me to be felled until yesterday. In fact, on Thursday I woke up at 5:30 AM,saw the bright clear blue sky, immediately threw on clothes, grabbed the binoculars, jumped in the car and drove to the refuge. I had to. It was like the willets and bobolinks were forcing me to go there. And were there ever a lot of bobolinks!?! The fields were full 'em doing their skylarking thing. I saw my first eastern kingbird of the year, which means it is now officially summer no matter what the calendar says. Astute readers of the bird list will notice not a single warbler species. There were plenty of them but they eluded me as I realized I was actually still sick (and this was before yesterday so little did I know). I was suddenly too tired to walk more than a few steps along the roadside to peer into the shrubs. I limited my list to birds I could see from the car. There were plenty of them. And many of them were attacking crows. Bobolinks after crows. Redwinged blackbirds after crows. An oriole after a crow. A Canada goose after a crow... Then it was back home to work and sneeze. At least I didn't miss the last nice day there's ever going to be.

And now to make more hot lemonade...

Thursday's Bird Sightings
Plum Island
song sparrow 4
willet 4
common tern 3
redwinged blackbird 8
common grackle 6
mourning dove 2
purple martion 14
gadwall 1
killdeer 2
mute swan 2
American robin 1
mallard 5
Canada goose 6
eastern kingbird 1
bobolink 9
double crested cormorant 1
American crow 2
American goldfinch 2
gray catbird 4
cedar waxwing 1
great egret 1
snowy egret 2
osprey 1
brownheaded cowbird 1
brown thrasher 2
purple finch 1
Baltimore oriole 1

Today's Reading
Jinriksha Days in Japan by Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore, The Geese of Beaver Bog by Bernd Heinrich

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Pedro Martinez


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Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan