Monday, April 13, 2009



















The warm-blooded skunk cabbage is the first to shrug off the winter leaves.

Vernal pools are alive with arthropods.
 The midges, with their innocent, feathery antennae,
swarm from the earth at my every step.


A mourning cloak emerges faded from hibernation and basks on a sunny rock.

I startle a pair of blue jays from an apple thicket and they fly off -- oddly silent.  
Do jays fall mute at nesting time?

The hawks are not quiet -- a red-tailed screams at me in annoyance and rides the wind away to the south.

Friday, April 10, 2009






With Nico the chessmen escape their rigid hierarchies and make unfamiliar moves.



Today they rode the carpet sea on a ship: and a silk scarf sail billowed from their flashlight mast.

Thursday, April 9, 2009


His abuela said she didn't want to see pictures of long-haired Porter, but here they are . . .


Tuesday, April 7, 2009


I heard the discordant call of a phoebe in the yard today.  If the flycatchers have arrived can spring be far off?

Sunday, April 5, 2009


I'm bothered by things that I can't comprehend as a whole -- at least after I've tried and failed to grasp them. 

It's like that with electricity and electrical devices for me. I just don't understand how electricity works.  There seem to be too many properties at work or something.

I just take their word for it that it's best to connect the ridged wires to the silver screw and the smooth wires to the brass screws -- but I don't like it.

The house graveyard of dysfunctional lamps was growing, and so I had to take up my wire strippers and needle-nose pliers and start swapping parts around to get a few going again.  And when I plugged it all in nothing caught fire, though I couldn't tell you why not.


Friday, March 27, 2009


Down to Pennsylvania to pick up the boys from Mom and Dad.  We all gathered at Cathie and Eric's in Kutztown.  Got to bounce little Birgit on my knee and hear a little about the boys' adventures.  Still a bit disoriented by jet lag, but it was nice to stroll along their muddy little creek with its wary mallards and streaking chubs.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

I had known only the literary or cinematic Paris -- 

the Paris of
Alexandre Dumas,
Anaïs Nin, 
François Truffaut . . . 

It was a pleasure to assemble in my
 mind a personal geography of road and river and monument.  

A geography to resonate the next time I enter a story set in Paris.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009


Monica and I have been pining for travel in general and Europe in particular.  Over 3 years have passed since we left Ireland, and time and money never seem to show up hand in hand.  
Although there were other things we might have done (without 15 teenagers in tow) we thoroughly enjoyed our trip over to France (and for Monica, to England as well, of course).

Our days in St. Avertin, Tours and the surrounding Touraine were wonderful.  The heart of the trip was the stay in St. Avertin with the host families.  Last fall twenty-some students from College Jules Romains traveled to Pine Point on an exchange.   It was a great success.

And that success was rewarded by a huge welcome for the Pine Point students as they were taken in by the local families.

The Zenonis, Marc, Natalie, Antoine and Charlotte were marvelous -- down to earth, cosmopolitan, with a warm and easy hospitality.  We should know better than to strike up friendships with people who live 3,500 miles distant, but we couldn't help it.  With luck we'll convince them to put Rhode Island on their itinerary.

(I've sometimes
 wondered about that sudden friendship that happens -- especially in travels.  Just people that you meet -- you may not know the details of their lives -- but you know them -- perhaps because you sense a shared understanding of the heart of things.)


Saturday, March 21, 2009

Travels with the Pine Point students

On our last sunny day in Paris we took the train to Versailles to walk the rooms of the great palace -- and afterwards a stroll past the Petit Palace to the Champs-Elysees. Three groups with different shopping styles headed up along the avenue toward the Arc de Triomphe. We reconvened back in the Latin Quarter for a final dinner.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Tuesday, March 17, 2009


In Amboise, we visited Clos Luce, the residence where Leonardo da Vinci passed his last three years.  The house and gardens there were filled with his inventions and reproductions of some of his great art.  From there we walked to the town's great castle, Chateau d'Amboise for a tour of the grounds and battlements.

Monday, March 16, 2009

The students spent the morning at the College Jules Romains de Saint Avertin with their friends -- visiting classes, watching a very impressive dress rehearsal and having lunch in the cafeteria. But afterwards, they left them to their studies and we made our way into the city of Tours for a guided walk of the historic downtown.

Sunday, March 15, 2009


We spent the morning walking in the local forest with Marc and Natalie, our host parents, while their children Antoine and Charlotte slept in.  In the afternoon, we reconnected with the students at Rochecorbon for a boat trip upon the Loire.  Elaborate houses and wine cellars (and even a silk factory) have been burrowed into the soft tufa limestone that make up the cliffs south of the river.

Saturday, March 14, 2009


In the morning we were taken into the souterrains, des sources du Limancon - a series of underground tunnels and reservoirs that were excavated beneath St. Avertin long ago to bring water to the fountains of Tours.  From there we went to the town's cultural center at Chateau Cange where our guides took us to the glacier or ice storage cave that was hewn deep in the cliffside.




In the afternoon the host families took us all to Chateau Chenonceau, a magnificent castle set upon the Loire river.




In the afternoon the host families took us all to Chateau Chenonceau, a magnificent castle set upon the Cher river.




Friday, March 13, 2009


After the overnight flight to Heathrow, we met Monica and her dozen 9th-graders for the flight on to Paris.

From there we took the high-speed rail to Saint Avertin, where the host families greeted us with tremendous warmth.  (The train is famous for being on time, but I think we managed to make it late.)