Thank You, and Farewell: H&G


Thank You, and Farewell
By Dominique Browning, Editor

It is hard to know what to say, with so little time to say it. House and Garden will close its doors this week; the December issue is the last to be published. I wish I could show you all our gorgeous January issue, produced with guest editor Murray Moss. Our copies of it will become collector's items…

I am extremely proud of all the fine work everyone here has done; we've served the design community with integrity and panache; we've given readers a piece of our hearts, every month, for more than a decade. We've produced a beautiful and interesting magazine, one with plenty of soul, and one that defied easy expectations.

Our readers have been wonderful, engaged, interested, and kept returning, year after year; I thank you all for that.

read the rest… Thank You, and Farewell: Dominique's Welcome: houseandgarden.com.

OH NO – I found this news on a few blogs in the past two days – This has been one of my most favorite “house p$rn” magazines for the last 10 years since it came back into being – at a time when I was increasingly aware that my dream house was not happening each year – and still hasn’t appeared – but that’s another story.  However, if devouring this and my other dream mag – the UK COUNTRY LIVING* – is an education – then I have had one of the best.  There were always many interesting articles and features – even if the price tags were not of my budget – still one can aspire.  

Not sure what is going to take its place in the American market….

*I know that CL is not exactly the same kind of mag but it has the same sensibilities – both have been steered by very strong women with good design bones…. oh well. good thing I saved so many of my H&Gs.

 

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Fall into Winter

Well, that Fall went by fast!

We are under a freeze/cold weather warning tonight and today my furnace came on – a little bit during the afternoon and then just now more fully.  That means that its chilly outside as I have my programmable thermostat set at 55 night and 58 days.  Well at least I made it to November this year!

So out to the garden and a little quick cleanup.  First the basil gets a haircut …

2007_11_07_012      2007_11_07_032

2007_11_07_033     2007_11_07_034

and then some pots are brought in.

2007_11_07_048

Bay Leaf and Rosemary and a Geranium (red of course)

And what to do with all of this? 

2007_11_07_045

Freezing Basil
How to Freeze Fresh Herbs: Rosemary and Thyme
More about Freezing Fresh Herbs: Freezing Thai Basil, Sage, Tarragon, and Mint

 

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BBC Radio 3’s first opera video stream


Carmen from the English National Opera – Video on demand
Watch the whole of Sally Potter’s exciting new production of Carmen for the English National Opera, on demand for 7 days from 6.30pm on Saturday 3 November 2007.

This is the first time that BBC Radio 3 has video streamed an opera, and the first time a UK opera house has offered a complete production online.

Carmen online is a co-production between ENO and BBC Radio 3, in association with Adventure Pictures and is part of the ENO Sky Arts Season. The production is directed by filmmaker Sally Potter (Orlando, The Tango Lesson), who has also directed the video streaming.

You have a choice of views: one filmed from the perspective of the audience in the auditorium at the London Coliseum, and the other from backstage.

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Golf balls, pebbles and sand



This was sent to my mother by her step grandson (a high school freshman).  Please share.

A Mayonnaise jar and two cups of coffee.

A professor stood before his philosophy class and had some items in front of him.

When the class began, wordlessly, he picked up a very large and empty mayonnaise jar and proceeded to fill it with golf balls. He then asked the students if the jar was full. They agreed that it was. 

The professor then picked up a box of pebbles and poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The pebbles rolled into the open areas between the golf balls. He then asked the students again if the jar was full they agreed it was.

The professor next picked up a box of sand and poured it into the jar . Of course, the sand filled up everything else. He asked once more if the jar was full. The students responded with a unanimous “yes.”

The professor then produced two cups of coffee from under the table and poured the entire contents into the jar, effectively filling the empty space between the sand. The students laughed.

“Now,” said the professor, as the laughter subsided, “I want you to recognize that this jar represents your life.”

“The golf balls are the important things- your God, family, your children, your health, your friends, and your favorite passions – things that if everything else was lost and only they remained your life would still be full. 

The pebbles are the other things that matter like your job, your house, and your car.
The sand is everything else — the small stuff.

If you put the sand into the jar first,” he continued, “there is no room for the pebbles or the golf balls. The same goes for life. If you spend all your time and energy on the small stuff, you will never have room for the things that are important to you.

Pay attention to the things that are critical to your happiness.
Play with your children. Take time to get medical checkups.
Take your partner out to dinner. Play another 18.
There will always be time to clean the house and fix the disposal.

Take care of the golf balls first — the things that really matter.
Set your priorities. The rest is just sand.”

One of the students raised her hand and inquired what the coffee represented.

The professor smiled. “I’m glad you asked. It just goes to show you that no matter how full your life may seem, there’s always room for a couple of cups of coffee with a friend.”

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The Fat Lady Sang…

More HERE

more later life is busy this week…

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Macbeth 1-1


A wonderfully written defense at PARTERRE… 

I’d like to admit a guilty pleasure of mine: I’ve secretly been waiting with a lot of anticipation for Maria Guleghina to sing in Macbeth and Norma this year. I have not told this to many people because it seems that the common expectation has been that she would be just short of a train wreck in both roles. Many of my wise opera buddies have commented on her wild/out-of-control/harsh/shrill/screamy/erratic voice and technique, and her inability to execute coloratura work. Yet anyone who saw Trittico or Cavalleria last season must have realized she’s in prime mid-late career voice at the moment. Many who already commented on the Sirius broadcast from tonight (10/26) heard it right – she had a GREAT night in Macbeth.

I am an advocate of giving artists the benefit of the doubt when they have an off night because I am aware of the pressures and intricate details that can affect the voice at any given performance. I hate to be present when it occurs (who does at these prices) but it happens. I refused to comment in depth about the singing in the Lucia two weeks ago for just that reason. My return visit to that opera last night unfortunately confirmed most of my initial impressions (excepting of course the pleasure of Stephen Costello’s debut as Edgardo and the secure high acrobatic singing of Annick Massis), however my impression of Macbeth, especially in regard to Guleghina couldn’t be further from the negative reviews I read in major publications.Most of the press fell over themselves in praise for Dessay in Lucia, yet claim the new Macbeth is “flawed”, “lacking”, and “sub-par” due to the performance of Maria Guleghina. To put Dessay on such a pedestal and then savage Guleghina just isn’t right. As told to me by a Met employee Mme. Guleghina was very hurt and upset by the press reaction to her performance. Tonight she took the opportunity of being in voice to prove them wrong.

Read the rest here

And an apposite view at MY FAVORITE INTERMISSIONS…

Oh, antes de nada, if you were going to ask, it’s pronounced LU-chich,where the first “ch” is pronounced on the, hmmm, I guess alveolar ridge, like the first c in “Lučić” and the second one is further back, like the second c in “Lučić.” What, I’d give you examples in English but it’s not phonemic in English, so I can’t.

Well, if I were cursed, you know, I think I’d want it to be a big, awful curse. A totally terrifying curse, yessiree Bob. What I mean is imagine you invited your whole family over and the clock struck midnight and some rather apologetic ghost sidled up to your Aunt Chayudis and muttered, “oh yeah. Boo or something,” and then just helped itself to the artichoke dip, nobody would really talk about it the next day, and pretty soon you’d have to serve better hors d’oeuvres to get people to come over. So in a certain way, it’s a pity the Met’s new Macbeth isn’t a full-fledged disaster. I say that sincerely: disaster is something you can sink your teeth into. This was just a disappointment, and like Royal Tenenbaum, I’m not very good with disappointment.

Your first question might, I’m thinking, be: did Guleghina take a shot at the C# in the sleepwalking scene? And I think what actually happened is she took a shot at the C# in another work altogether, perhaps one by Luigi Nono. Or, hell, La Sonnambula. It’s confusing. No-one can blame her. What she actually hit with that shot was…well it was a high C#, right where it should be, but it wasn’t something you’d ever ask to hear again. (I’m imagining Guleghina auditioning for the part, if that’s how things happened. Thank you, Ms. Guleghina. Please don’t do that again. Did you bring any Mozart?) It came from the wrong side of the tracks, that C#, and it brought its friends C and B, thugs, the lot of them. I have started with the bad news, because I’m like that. The
good news is if she could walk around with maybe Elizabeth Schwarzkopf behind her, she would be a certain kind of fascinating in this role.

Read the rest here

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October musings

Watched the RED SOX and Rockies play a more matched game tonight – while last night's huge lopsided win was good for morale it was a bit boring to watch a FIFTH consecutive hit-heavy game.  NOT that I want BO to lose but a fan wants to see a good fight.

''I'm actually ecstatic with the way we're playing,'' Boston third baseman Mike Lowell said. ''We're on the verge of winning a World Series.''  And yes, we are too – ecstatic that is.   

Lowell's play at Third Base was the "biggest play of the game" according to Francona.  "That made my night,'' Francona said of Lowell's play. "Well, a lot of other things did, too, but that was special. A lot of guys just pull up there into second base. Mikey saw the opening and took it. That's the ballgame right there."

Thanks too to Schilling and Okajima and Papelbon  – ''This was the Pap-ajima show tonight,'' Schilling said. ''That was just phenomenal to watch.''

"I'm definitely more nervous now at this stage in my career," Schilling said. "I think it's because I know things are winding down and now I look around and enjoy so many things around me, like watching Josh [Beckett] and [Hideki] Okajima. It's fun. When I was young, it was just getting myself ready 24/7. Now I'm enjoying what I'm getting to see."

Tom Verducci (CNN Sports) writes "Nearing 41, pitching against a flamethrower nearly half his age, Schilling won a pitcher's duel at Fenway in the World Series. It was a game to remember, including when his name appears on a Hall of Fame ballot."

The home team advantage looms as the game shifts to Coors Field – as Papelbon said in a postgame interview – "There will be 50,000 fans there and we just have to go in and get our business done."   It would be great to hope that BO will win the next two but IF they don't it would be 2-2 and back to Boston for the final two which would augur well for a good final match for the New England Fans.

And the Rockies are ready too – ''We're going to make a series out of this,'' Rockies rookie Troy Tulowitzki said.

Again from CNN's Verducci – "the Red Sox are not suited for Coors Field or NL rules. They will lose at least one big bat out of their lineup, with a pitcher having to take the at-bats that would go to Kevin Youkilis, David Ortiz or Mike Lowell. And if Francona plays Ortiz at first and Youkilis at third, he will have two infielders playing out of position and a left fielder, Manny Ramirez, whose defense could be exposed in the vast Coors outfield.

It's hard to imagine anybody beating Josh Beckett, the Boston Game 5 pitcher if we get that far, but Colorado has a decent chance of turning this into a real series over the next two games."

* * *

Thank goodness for the cool weather returning, at last, here in the Hudson River Valley – it may finally be time to retire the window fans and haul out the portable heaters.  With gas prices up, thank goodness for the new programmable thermostat – last winter it helped bring the heating bill down substantially from the previous year.  One good thing about living in this tiny railroad apt where the four main rooms are about 12×12 is that a portable heater warms up the small spaces very quickly and efficiently.  And with a combination of louvred doors and heavy curtains (there were NO connecting doors when I moved in), a small closed room becomes toasty very quickly.  And of course layered wool clothing is helpful too.  This past winter after the installation of the programmable thermostat (55 nite/58 day), I became very familiar with the skiing and cold country clothing company websites stocking up on wool underwear as my basic home garment layered with big wool sweaters (worn tunic like).  Being a knitter,fingerless gloves work up fast, and my multicolored collection attests.

I am a little ahead of the weather – but probably not much. Who knows what it will be in the next few weeks?  We can hope for a gradual descent to cold temps but given the varied and unprecedented temps of the last month, who knows? (I won't start on the Global Warming topic – you can read Al Gore).  So where it was 75 on Tuesday and 70 on Wednesday and is 48 right now – it could be 30 by next weekend.  

A comparison of electric consumption between the last three years disclosed an increase – the only changeable factor being the temperature – and thus the increased use of fans.  Usually October is the lowest month of electricity use.  Sigh.

* * *

Tonight at our weekly knitting group at a village coffeehouse, a bantering conversation with the barista about the music selection.  This is a smallish venue located on the main commercial street of one of the Hudson River villages.  It is quiet and lightly trafficked now mainly due to its location both at the end of the street and across from the vast (95 acres) GM former plant now a fenced vast empty lot.  There is great controversy around the proposed development of this site – where are the Rouse's of former years? I digress.

So, we knitters asked our regular barista whether he was allowed to choose the music that played (as always in commercial places TOO loudly – we are constantly asking to have it turned down)  As it happens, they use Sirius and he said he could choose between a few channels.  So I asked if he would take a request for a channel – 85 perhaps?  (If you are not a Sirius fan that is the MET Opera channel)  However, although obliging at first, when he found out it was Opera – a shaking head.  Oh well, it was worth a shot (I guess) and would have been nice to hear the opening of tonight's LUCIA played thru the big speakers.  

I did catch the "Mad scene" of the Live webcast tonight – with Annick Massis in the second cast role of Lucia – and was quite taken with her portrayal.  Interestingly, the flute soloed with her but only in the cabeletta , the glass harmonica opened the scene.   I thought she was quite good  – clear ringing bell tones in her coloratura and the entire scene dramatically and sensitively sung.

* * *
While looking up the Met schedule, the website has this intriguing annoucement:

The turnout for our open call for War and Peace extras just over a week ago was terrific. But we still need additional male supernumeraries to populate the ranks of the Russian and French armies in the company’s monumental production, which returns to the Met in December.

A second audition will be held this Saturday, October 27, 2007, at 10AM at Good Shepherd-Faith Church. The church is located at 152 W. 66th Street, between Broadway & Amsterdam Aves. We are looking for men to portray soldiers, so come prepared to march! Bring a picture and resume if available.

The production, which had its spectacular company premiere in 2002, is the largest in the Met’s vast repertoire, with nearly 75 solo roles. Based on Tolstoy’s
epic novel, War and Peace depicts Napoleon’s 1812 invasion of Russia and subsequent defeat. The Met’s principal guest conductor Valery Gergiev will be on the podium, with leading roles sung by Irina Mataeva, Ekaterina Semenchuk, Larisa Shevchekno, Kim Begley, Samuel Ramey, and Vassily Gerello. Join them on the Met stage!

Know any aspiring spear carriers?

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Start as you mean to go on…


October 24, 2007

Colorado 1, Boston 13 at Fenway Park
Colorado Record: (0-1)
Boston Record: (1-0)

Winning pitcher – Josh Beckett (1-0)
Losing pitcher -  Jeff Francis (0-1)

Colorado Runs: 1, Hits: 6, Errors: 0
Boston Runs: 13, Hits: 17, Errors: 0

HR: COL – None
HR: BOS – D. Pedroia  (1)

Next Boston Game: October 27, 2007 06:00 PM MT vs. Colorado Rockies

"Beckett got off to the most overpowering start since Sandy Koufax,
Pedroia became only the second player to lead off the Series with a
home run, and then a relentless offense led by Manny Ramirez and David
Ortiz racked up hit after hit.

Boston set a record for runs and
victory margin in an opener and finished with 17 hits, becoming the
first club to hit eight doubles in a Series game since 1925. After
taking a 6-1 lead against Colorado ace Jeff Francis, the Red Sox piled
on seven runs in the fifth, when Rockies reliever Ryan Speier walked
three straight batters with the bases loaded — the first time that
ever happened in a Series game."

RTRH

Not much knitting done yet – a lot of desk work to do tonight.  But off now to do a little knitting and enjoy the COOL weather finally!

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Will the Green Monster roar tonight?

OR
How much knitting will be done during this WS?

Game   Matchup     Day   Date      Time ET   TV  
Gm 1   COL @ BOS   Wed   Oct. 24    8 pm     FOX 
Gm 2   COL @ BOS   Thu   Oct. 25    8 pm     FOX 
Gm 3   BOS @ COL   Sat   Oct. 27    8 pm     FOX 
Gm 4   BOS @ COL   Sun   Oct. 28    8 pm     FOX 
Gm 5*   BOS @ COL   Mon   Oct. 29   TBD      FOX 
Gm 6*   COL @ BOS   Wed   Oct. 31   TBD      FOX 
Gm 7*   COL @ BOS   Thu   Nov. 1    TBD      FOX 
   * – if necessary  
       all times tentative  
       All times are Eastern Standard Times

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Start as you mean to go on…


October 24, 2007

Colorado 1, Boston 13 at Fenway Park
Colorado Record: (0-1)
Boston Record: (1-0)

Winning pitcher – Josh Beckett (1-0)
Losing pitcher –  Jeff Francis (0-1)

Colorado Runs: 1, Hits: 6, Errors: 0
Boston Runs: 13, Hits: 17, Errors: 0

HR: COL – None
HR: BOS – D. Pedroia  (1)

Next Boston Game: October 27, 2007 06:00 PM MT vs. Colorado Rockies

“Beckett got off to the most overpowering start since Sandy Koufax,
Pedroia became only the second player to lead off the Series with a
home run, and then a relentless offense led by Manny Ramirez and David
Ortiz racked up hit after hit.

Boston set a record for runs and
victory margin in an opener and finished with 17 hits, becoming the
first club to hit eight doubles in a Series game since 1925. After
taking a 6-1 lead against Colorado ace Jeff Francis, the Red Sox piled
on seven runs in the fifth, when Rockies reliever Ryan Speier walked
three straight batters with the bases loaded — the first time that
ever happened in a Series game.”

RTRH

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