Monday, April 20, 2009

Cows, Flowers, Cats and Beads

Choco and the Cows
The days are warming up and Choco and I go out for longer walks. We went to visit the cows which I find interesting but which Choco doesn't like much at all.


"Those ladies are too big!"

True but they look just like Choco and they come to the fence to visit with her.

Edible Flowers
When I was a child I remember reading a book called "The Boy Who Ate Flowers". I don't why that book has stayed in my head but I remember my 6 or 7 year old brain thinking that it was such a funny book. Then I come to Japan and find that people really do eat flowers! These are called Nanohana which are Rape blossoms in English. True, we use Rape seed oil in both Western and Eastern cooking but Japanese also eat these blossoms and stems. (These have probably grown too large for human eating but when the shoots are younger they are tender and delicious.) In the fall the Japanese like to eat an edible type of chrysanthemum ("A rose by any other name would smell as sweet." -- Shakespeare. A chrysanthemum by any other name would be easier to spell. --Tanya)


Cat Balls
I know I show this picture of the armchair with three or four cats in it every few weeks. You're getting tired of looking at the same cats in the same chair. They are so funny though. Three of them (the bigger three) decided they all wanted to occupy the same space. Toi especially is very happy to sit with, on, under, beside, next to, around anyone. Patora looks a little disgruntled.


And a few minutes later they shifted around a bit and Chip joined the cat ball.


Handwork
This is my handwork for the weekend. I purchased this hand made glass bead a few months ago and it has been lost in the drawer ever since. This weekend I decided to make a necklace with a Chinese knotting technique my friend Mrs. Ochiai once taught me. It took a while to get my brain back remembering how to make knots (you know how you learn a computer technique and then a few weeks or months later you know you knew how to do it but you don't remember how! Same thing.) but in the end it worked out. I'm sending it off to a friend and not showing Mrs. Ochiai because she'd probably tell me I did it wrong...



12 comments:

mamaspark said...

Your cat ball cracked me up!! We get those periodically here although never all 5 together. They all hate Jack. Though occasionally they all sleep on my bed at the same time.

Rae Ann said...

I never get tired of seeing all of your Cats, especially Toi and Chip. It's as if they were my own. I love the beautiful necklace you made. The bead in the center is just stunning, very Japanese, color and all. I'm sure your friend will really love it.
Rae Ann

Sonnja said...

Lovely photo's from the cats!
Kind regards,

Beertje Zonn

Colleen formerly of South Africa said...

Love the pictures you added. I really enjoy seeing into your everyday life.

BrendaLou said...

The cat ball is a wonder. We have two cats and it's rare they will stay near each other....except when it's very cold, then they like to both sleep on top of us, but never touching! the necklace is pretty too.

The Calico Quilter said...

1. People eat squash blossoms and other kinds of flowers here, but they usually only show up on the menus of "foo-foo" restaurants! 2. Keep up the cat ball pictures - I love them. 3. That blue bead is beautiful. I have the feeling that if you bought enought to fill a whole string it would be terribly expensive, But it would be striking. Your knotted necklace is pretty and lets the bead really shine. I know the recipient will love it.

The Calico Cat said...

I think they are too cute for words...
At least you are not hearing, "Mom he is touching me." That is what my girl cat says if she even thinks that the boy is coming in for a cuddle, sniff, swat...

CT said...

LOL! I think your cats are hilarious! Everytime you show a photo of them, I have to call my brother to watch it!

Perhaps because in Mexico we are so used to eating flowers... we eat the squash blossoms (like someone else mentioned) but also jamaica blosoms (we boil them for "tea" and we make really cooling water, which is good to fight infections). Then there's another flower that I do not know the name in english, that at school we kids used to pick and eat, and the bugambilia flowers in tea are very refreshing!

LOL@"A chrysanthemum by any other name would be easier to spell"
I 'll keep on saying it, you ROCK!!! oh! rocks! the necklace is beautiful!!!!

Anonymous said...

I read your blog regularly -- without a blog of my own. Rarely comment on anyones. On my first trip to China in 1988, we arrived late at night and were taken to the apartment of a friend's family. They cooked a quick meal and the green shoots in the stir fry were so delicious. When the translation book came out we discovered that they were rape shoots. Asking at home later we discovered that 'canola' has replaced 'rape' in vocabulary. Just thought I'd share that for folks who aren't familiar with rape seeds. I can see why the vocabulary has changed! Love your work. Linda P. from Winnipeg, Canada

dianne said...

nasturtiums are good to eat, too (they're kinda peppery) ... and dandelion blossoms are tasty in muffins ... and pansies in spring salads ... and rose petals ...... ha ha - i guess i spelled nasturtiums correctly - spell check didn't throw it back up

meggie said...

I will never get tired of seeing your cats! Seeing I cant have one, I have to 'share' yours.
Love that glass bead, & I think you made a lovely job of it, it is beautiful.

Lazy Gal Tonya said...

I love seeing the kitties always, especially when they are sooo cute all tucked together like that.