This diary is a chronicle of my daily life. I don't really add to it anymore,
but it remains here for historical purposes.
Today I let Arlan and David take me to the Zoo in Haifa. I'd never gotten
around to Haifa before, and I was duly impressed with how pretty some areas of
the city are. The gardens of the Bahai temple are the centerpiece of this
beauty, and I look forward to taking a tour there with Dad in a couple weeks.
I also noticed a museum of Japanese art that I hope will tempt Mom. The zoo
itself a pretty standard animals-in-cages sort of affair, but well-executed in
a lovely valley full of shady trees. As people who raise snakes, David and
Arlan were most interested in the snakes and, to a lesser extent, other
reptiles. The reptile house didn't disappoint, and especially featured snakes
that are native to Israel, as well as turtles, tortoises, crocodiles, iguanas,
lizards, a monitor, a skink, and so on. The grounds had peacocks roaming free
and various farm animals in wooden pens, including a friendly billy goat with
his two nannies. The tiger was magnificent, but she seemed a little thin and
paced quite restlessly around her pen, which seemed a couple sizes too small
for her. The leopards seemed a little more serene. I especially enjoyed the
nocturnal animal exhibits. There was a pair of barn owls that sat up on a
ledge almost as still as statues, peering down at us like gargoyles. The
eagle owls were of grand proportions and had gorgeous eyes and ferocious
talons. The bat display gave me the most effective show of the little
beasties that I'd ever seen. It was illuminated with a red light that seems
to be invisible to bats, so they were active and happily showed off their
aerial acrobatics. Speaking of acrobatics, the striped lemurs danced so
expertly among the trees that they seemed to be giving a performance. There
was a monkey cage directly adjacent to a cage full of colorful roosters, and
that struck me as an odd juxtaposition. It was a fun afternoon, and we topped
it off with a trip to a fancy bead store to fuel David's latest cottage
industry of producing necklaces and earrings.
Posted at Wed Sep 19 01:13:27 2007
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I was a little worried about going into a three-day holiday weekend for this
year's Rosh Hashanna. We don't get too many of those in Israel. There are a
lot of meals to plan and keep track of. But it worked out quite nicely. I
spent a couple meals at other families' houses, hosted a meal at my house, had
a couple meals alone to relax and decompress, and rounded it all out by
attending a community pot-luck for residents in the Artists' Quarter. All this
added up to letting me touch base with a whole lot of friends and
acquaintances, some of whom I hadn't seen in a while. Elana Schachter lent me
a sci-fi anthology and a couple comic-strip compilations of "Barnaby", about a
little boy and his cigar-smoking fairy godfather. I promptly consumed the
science fiction stories well before Shabbos ended, and now I'm ready to return
them all. May y'all have a sweet and happy coming year.
Posted at Sun Sep 16 18:29:41 2007
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Today I joined with Seth and Rachel and Jackie to greet Paul and Carol
Siegel and Paul's mother Muriel at the airport as they arrived to make aliyah.
Nefesh B'Nefesh put on a whole ceremony for the new olim. Rachel and Jackie
held up signs for them to see as they got off the plane. It was the first time
I had been to one of these things. It must be nice to come into the country
with so much cheering and enthusiasm. Right now, the Siegels should be
settling into their lovely new apartment in Rechavia and are lucky enough to be
starting their new life here with a friend's wedding tonight. I wish them all
the best.
Posted at Tue Sep 4 13:07:32 2007
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At 4am this past Wednesday, Rebecca gave birth to a healthy little boy!
Woo!
Posted at Fri Aug 24 15:57:47 2007
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It looks like this apartment comes with a flatmate. I've got a lovely
little yellow-striped jumping spider crawling the walls here, and I've been
seeing it quite frequently over the past few days. It's only thumbnail sized,
so all of you that were terrified of the palm-sized hairy brown beast that made
cameo appearances in my last place can relax. It appears to be unable to spin
webs and rather roams around to proactively hunt its food. I wish it great
success because I don't have any screens on the windows to keep out unwanted
insects. I'll be taking suggestions for a name for this new buddy.
Gender-neutral names are preferred since I've practically no way of sexing the
creature.
Posted at Tue Aug 7 12:45:29 2007
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