Monthly Archives: June 2016

What Could be Better than Living by the Pacific Ocean?

Not much really. The shoreline is ever-changing, but always a delight and I am thankful to live at the furthermost south end of San Pedrito in El Pescadero, BCS.

Heaven is my home. Every morning we take the trail across the street from our house and we’re on the beach in under a minute.

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A quick walk and my toes are in the water.

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Living on the Shores of the Pacific

It’s not merely the waves

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or the sun or the sand

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It’s more than the spray

DSC01774or the crash or the splash

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It’s not only the sparkle

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or the rocks or the fish

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It’s the wonder of it all

A whipped cream of an ocean dance

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With the vapors and song of the shore

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to erase our worries and make our hearts sing.

 

Summer’s Here in Southern Baja

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Bienvenidos a el Verano

(Welcome to the Summer)

Just a tad humid so far, and still the occasional marine layer hanging around, but summer is definitely here in Southern Baja. It’s so quiet around here too, as those with 2nd homes have gone to parts elsewhere. I like it quiet, but most folks would say it’s quiet even when it’s high season. Just depends on what you call quiet I guess. El Pescadero and Todos Santos are not big cities. Más como pueblos pequeños. (More like small towns).

Here are some sights around my place:

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Sour Pitaya

“The sour pitaya is a sprawling, much-branched cactus, with branches up to 3 metres long (see also the image below). The stems are dark grey-green. Where their tips touch the ground they can take root, so that eventually this cactus can form thick, impenetrable thickets. This cactus is a near-endemic of the Baja California peninsula, although it also grows in a small region of mainland Mexico. It is a dominant plant in many desert regions of Baja California. The name “sour pitaya” refers to the fruits, which are edible but not as sweet as those of the organ pipe cactus. The plant produces large white flowers, usually in July – September.” Taken from http://archive.bio.ed.ac.uk/jdeacon/desertecology/cacprof1.htm

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Santa-Maria Barrel Cactus (This one is huge)

or

Ferocactus santa-maria

The flowers are so pretty on these cactus. What am I saying? All cactus flowers are gorgeous.

Barrel Cactus in Bloom

Barrel Cactus in Bloom

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Bananas soon!

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Golden Barrel Cactus

These aren’t native to Southern Baja, but they are all over in pretty landscaped areas.

We used to have two, but one died after about a year.

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Agave (front and center) and Cardon

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Traveler’s Palm (Ravenala madagascariensis) and Arika Palm (on right)

Travelers palms are actually members of the bird-of-paradise plant family, and is more closely related to the banana tree family than the palm tree because of the shape of the leaves. It’s a fast grower. The traveler’s palm gets its name from the fact that thirsty travelers could find stores of water in many parts of the plant including the leaf folds, flower bracts, and inside each of the hollow leaf bases each of which may hold up to one quart of water.

– See more at: http://www.palmtreepassion.com/travelers-palm.html#.V2rDrle_2u4

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Ah, the fragrant and lovely plumeria!

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Our Finch on our Cardon

We call him ours, as he and his main squeeze have been nesting here and raising their babies.

They sit on our kitchen window bars and watch me cook.

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“Stand up and be Counted!” says my hibiscus.

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Our friends planted the top of a pineapple and lo and behold…a baby comes into their garden.

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A tree in our friends’ yard puts out this beauty. We don’t know what it is. Do you?

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Wouldn’t be summer without bougainvilleas and mangoes.

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The flower of the nopal cactus graces our front yard.

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Hibiscus that haven’t opened and a visiter. Look closely at the photo above in the bottom, left quadrant.

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Here’s a close-up of the dragonfly on my plumeria bud.

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Mangle–Mangrove

Coastal region native plant.

We were lucky enough to have a lot of these mangroves on our property. They don’t transplant well at all. We give them a little water and they are flourishing.

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All the low growing bush-like plants are mangrove. In the summer they have those pretty red berries.

See more @https://tosea.wordpress.com/2015/10/28/mangroves-the-trees-of-life/

Next time I will include the beach. It’s not summer without spending time at the beach, right?

But wherever you are, enjoy your life. Every single moment.

When I’m not pulling out my hair…

over the political scene in America, I’m cooking, baking, walking the dog, reading, writing, cleaning house, singing to myself, dancing by myself, doing the laundry, exercising, working with my husband, or relaxing in my hammock chair. You get the picture. But sometimes I let my creative juices guide me into some other territory.

Don’t bother reading this one unless you like little kids and are interested in making a Pop-Up Book for some little one you know and love. Maybe it’s a birthday gift that you want to personalize. Or maybe it’s just for no special occasion, except you want this little tyke to know how much you care about her (or him). This post is a quasi “How-to-Make-a-Pop-Up Book.”

I can’t draw. I simply can’t. But I have lots of ideas and lots of ways of letting out those juices I mentioned. I don’t let it bother me that I can’t draw. I just doodle around it. So here goes my little lesson on making a pop-up book.

First you must have an idea of what you want the book to be. An ABC book? A little story? A picture book? A photo book?

Next gather your supplies. Heavy weight paper of different colors, pencils, pens, scissors, glue, water color pencils, paint pens, and markers are important items. Obviously if you are doing a photo book or a picture book (where you aren’t doing the illustrating) you will need to throw those things into the mix. The sky is the limit really. I could see using buttons, ribbons, glitter, stickers, stamps…whatever you want. Let your story line guide you, or let your supplies guide your story line. Either way, just have fun.

Okay, now I’m going to cheat. I’m going to send you to a site where this great fellow shows you how to do lots of different pop-ups. Why reinvent the wheel I always say.

Visit http://wp.robertsabuda.com/make-your-own-pop-ups/

This said, I must say he doesn’t have you put a back on your page though, and that is something you must do.

Here’s another site: http://www.wikihow.com/Make-a-Pop-up-Book

You can find lots of YouTube videos as well. Go ahead. Check out the internet.

Here is what I made for Aleia (Ah-lay-ah). She is a sweet little girl who will be two on Sept. 14th.

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I took this picture of her last week. Isn’t she darling?

At first I wrote out this story with tons of detail. Then I thought, how silly that was because she isn’t old enough for such depth. She won’t have the attention span for something like that. I’ll save that story for when she’s older. But what I did was pare it down. Way down. Basic items of the story.

I’ll just show you the book now. Here’s the cover:

 

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Next up, the first page: On a beautiful day, Aleia went for a walk.

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Doodles, lots of them.

My simple pop-up parts are the letters to her name. So the first page has an A.

Page 2: The birds were singing and the sun was shining. (The letter “l” pops up).

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More doodles and a couple stick figures, plus lots of color. Kids like color.

Page 3: Down the road she discoverd two ducks playing in a pool. (The pop up is an “e.”)

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Okay, I tried my hand at a little illustration, but I couldn’t even draw the ducks, so I got some clip art from google images. The rest of it are my attempts at drawing. I used markers and water color pencils, so I added water and smeared the paint. Works for me.

 

Page 4: The next thing you know…Aleia found a red, yellow and orange kite. “I bet I can fly this kite.” And guess what? She did!!5

 

Again, I doodle, use water color pencils and clip art.

Page 5: At the top: FREE BALLOONS. Wow! 3 red balloons tied to a fence. Free! What could be better?

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Aleia has a kite and 3 red balloons. But wait (written in the arrow) There’s more!

(Next section) Farther down the road were 3 sunny yellow flowers. It was meant to be.

Okay, those pages all have a pop-up of the letters of her name. A-l-e-i-a

Last page: When Aleia got home, she gave her daddy the kite, her mama the 3 sunny yellow flowers, and she gave the 3 red balloons to her baby sister. Why? Because Aleia has a happy, giving heart. 7

 

The heart is the pop-up on this last page.

I haven’t given her the book yet. Saturday I will go over to see her and I hope she loves it.

That’s it. You may wish to do something like this for a child in your life instead of pulling out your hair or doing laundry. It’s therapeutic for me. Who knows, maybe for you too.

 

 

 

Baja Surfing–Sometimes it’s a Dog’s World!

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Cala does her thing!

What makes for a more exciting afternoon at the beach than

a dog surfing contest?

The recent 3rd annual Dog Surfing Competition at Los Cerritos was definitely a hit with all who attended. This contest is a fund raiser for Pescy Dogs, getting its name from the town El Pescadero, where it’s located.

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Collecting donations!

Our community’s organization, Pescy Dogs, works 24/7 to provide shelter, medical care and most importantly love for sick, injured and/or homeless dogs in the El Pescadero area, BCS. http://www.pescydogs.org

Kim of Baja Zen http://baja-zen.com works tirelessly to put on this fun event.

Thanks, Kim!

Even if you missed the dog surfing contest at Los Cerritos on June 5th,

you still have a chance to donate to the Pescy Dogs.

 http://dogsurfcompcerritos.com/donate/

We’re just a hop, skip, and jump from Todos Santos, but Pescadero has a different flare because we are more of a farming and beach community than our neighbor to the north.

 

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Surfers share the beach with the fishermen too.

 

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Danito, a local farmer.

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sunrise at Cerritos

Early morning at Los Cerritos.

If you’re a surfer anywhere on the west coast of North America you’ve most likely heard of Los Cerritos. Any day of the week you will find people and dogs enjoying the beach, but on June 5th it was all about the canines!

 

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The fans and their dogs and families!

 

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Well, maybe some of the children had other ideas, but the surf dogs put on the best show.

 

 

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Local surfer, Perry, helps Marshmallow get out for a wave in the first heat.

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The dogs were into it.

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What a beauty!

 

Here goes Marshmallow again!

 

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Go, Marshmallow, go!

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Baraka is on the beach all the time with Juan Carlos. Today it looks like she can walk on water!

 

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Dismount with grace!

 

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Sweet pup named Surfo!

 

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Meanwhile, back on the beach–boys do what boys do! Dogs aren’t the only ones who dig holes.

 

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The shovel is for–well–you know.

Back to the contest: Sully is Tillman’s brother. And Tillman was a famous canine surfer, better known as a skateboarder. He has his own Facebook Page too: https://www.facebook.com/TillmanSkates

Sully has lots of spunk and style. See for yourself.

 

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Making his brother proud.

 

 

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Pirata is a local Cerritos dog who belongs to Perry. What a great surfer (Perry too).

 

 

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Pirata nails it.

 

Cala brings home the prize for Carlos and Paula of Todos Santos Surf Shop. Way to go!
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1st Place: Cala of Todos Santos—sponsored by Todos Santos Surf Shop https://www.facebook.com/todossantossurfshop.activities/ and Explora Baja https://www.facebook.com/explorabaja/?fref=nf

2nd Place: Pirata from our local Cerritos Beach—sponsored by Baja Zen and La Katrina Surf Shop.

3rd Place: Sully from Scorpion Bay—sponsored by Tillman.

Best Wave award went to Pirate sponsored by La Katrina Surf Shop https://todossantos.cc/shops-and-business/la-katrina-surf-shop/ .

See you all next year at Los Cerritos for another fun dog surf contest.

Visit the official Dog Surf Contest page if you like: http://dogsurfcompcerritos.com

 

We All Scream for Ice Cream

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Purée a bunch of mangoes in a blender or food processor.

Add a little sugar to the mangoes and blend some more.

Pour this mixture into a shallow pan.

Let freeze for 2 hours.

Blend this mixture again. Set aside.

Whip some heavy whipping cream with sugar and vanilla till it forms peaks.

Add the blended frozen mango mixture to the whipped cream.

Mix well and then return to the freezer

in the container you want to keep your ice cream in.

Freeze for 3-4 more hours and voila–Mango Ice Cream.

Invite your friends over and get ready for a treat.

It’s the creamiest, best thing we’ve ever eaten.

 I know I did’t give you measurements** for the ingredients,

because I often just wing it.

That’s what I did here, and I think I should have used more

mangoes to how much whipped cream I used.

Next time.

Trust me, that next time will be soon.

You get the hang of it, right?

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**I used about half what is in this bowl with about 2 cups of whipping cream.

Sugar it up, but mangoes are super sweet. You don’t need much.

No matter how you do it, if you love mangoes, you’ll love the end product.

Go for it!

Mango Heaven is Here! Life is All About the Food, Right?

 

 

Millions of mangos! Our friends, Bill and Shauna have mangos coming on their old 3-story tall mango trees. These close neighbors open their beautiful place for friends to come pick mangos.

We got two five-gallon buckets FULL of the gorgeous fruit yesterday. We’re in mango heaven right now.

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These mangos below are going to “Hippy Steve” to feed his pigs.

Steve doesn’t live far from Bill and Shauna’s place.

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I estimate that they have 15-20 beautiful mango trees, not to mention all the palms and ornamentals and agave (for tequila). The agave are in the forefront of the photo below.

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Heavy with Mangos.

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The trees and the ground are covered in this tasty fruit.

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See the buckets in Little Red (our Polaris)?

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This place is lush with beauty and talk about peaceful.

It doesn’t get better than this.

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You can imagine how many birds show up here.

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Below are the pits and peelings (looking down inside the bucket yesterday).

I actually love this photo for some reason. Maybe it’s just me, but I think it’s pretty.

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Tomorrow’s post will show you the ice cream and I’ll explain how I process mangos for using in our smoothies, etc.  Come back tomorrow for more mango news from beautiful Pescadero in Baja California Sur.