We live our lives forever taking leave - Rilke

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Saturday, 3 May 2025

Saturday, May 3/2025


Well, the rotary end of winter barrel sank through the softening ice on the lake in Sioux Lookout so it’s time to pack up and go back. Have been spoiled with warm temperatures not only in Cyprus but with gloriously warm and sunny weather in London - significantly better than King Charles was able to command for his coronation at this time two years ago.

The current Airbnb one of the best combinations of location and facilities we’ve had. Well, OK, it’s 39 steps up - a literary cum cinematic ring to that - but the view behind is out over rooftops and trees, some still in flower, and you can hear the doves cooing.

Plus - returning from poetry to prose -  microwave, kettle, toaster all good quality and working - and there is actually a washing machine. All in a surprisingly small space. We may be back.

Friday, 2 May 2025

Friday, May 2/2025

Sunset over the chimneys

It was Dr Johnson who said ‘When a man is tired of London he is tired of life’. So we choose where to go this afternoon. And settle on the Tate Modern gallery, hoping for something dramatic in its Turbine Hall (3300 square meters, twenty-six metres high). Home to some of our favourite past exhibits. 

But not to be. We reach the platform at Kilburn Station just as a train is pulling in on the southbound Jubilee line. The carriages fill up but the train doesn't start. Then the announcement. Due to a fire on the track, there will be a delay of fifteen minutes or more. The carriages empty onto the platform as people start rethinking their plans. 

This is not exactly unprecedented. Coming back from the Saatchi yesterday there was a delay of about fifteen minutes caused, apparently, by a fire at West Hampstead Station, but service resumed and there was nothing to be seen passing West Hampstead Station. So we decide to sit down and see what transpires. 

At which point a short man with a high-vis vest and a megaphone voice begins shouting that the station is being evacuated and everyone must leave. We do, with something less than fire drill precision, a couple of hundred people navigating a double staircase, some hampered by suitcases or small children. No sign of fire, but megaphone voice is persistent, and he does succeed in opening the exit gates which frees the bottleneck caused by people attempting to touch the electronic button with their cards to exit. No panic, probably because we don’t quite believe in the reality of the emergency. No sign of smoke or fire. No official activity other than megaphone voice’s repeated calls to evacuate.

Do have a couple of fire engines pass us headed toward the station as we start down Kilburn High Road. Bit late for a plan B that doesn’t involve leaving from Kilburn underground station, but it’s a balmy day and we do have minor errands along one of our favourite roads.

Thursday, 1 May 2025

Thursday, May 1/2025


 May 1. May Day. Traditional day for honouring workers, and celebrated as such in many, possibly most, countries. Not a public holiday in the UK though. 

J suggests we check out the  Saatchi Gallery. It’s on our regular beat and often features modern international artists, with most exhibits being free. 

It’s a hot day, actually reaches a May 1 record temperature of 29.3, according to the Met office.

There’s a playing field and track next to the Saatchi, much enjoyed by nearby schools. The children are all wearing sun hats, but they’re not sneaking off looking for peripheral shade. Bouncy as puppies despite the heat.

The most interesting displays feature works by Anne von Freiburg from the Netherlands. Her work is referred to as textile paintings, as good a description as any. Textile, patchwork and stitching. Strong colours and 3D effect very much in your face.





Wednesday, April 30/2025


Thames Ditton to see Jenny and Doug, with the date chosen this time so that Elaine and Hugh could come as well. Always enjoy visiting with them. Archetypically beautiful summer day. So Prosecco in the garden and happy conversation. Laura drops by with her two little dogs so we get to see her as well. 

Jenny has made maqloub for lunch (spellings vary, presumably because it’s transliterated from Arabic). It’s a traditional rice, vegetable and meat dish. It’s cooked layered in a pot, which is flipped upside down to serve. Sometimes considered Palestine’s national dish, but eaten throughout the Middle East. Jenny’s father, who was Palestinian born, taught me how to make it, so it evokes good memories for us as well as for Jenny and Elaine.

And back outside for a lovely strawberry cake and tea and more talk, lunch having lasted, as a perfect lunch should, all afternoon.

Tuesday, 29 April 2025

Tuesday, April 29/2025



Love Kilburn High Road. Vibrant, multi-ethnic, All colour and movement. Babies in push chairs; old people with canes; children in school uniforms, ties hanging loose at the end of the day. Street corner markets; shop goods spilling out onto the pavements; scent of coffee and Middle East cooking; sim sales and mobile unlocking; a man handing out appetizer size bits of deep fried shrimp; golden chickens turning on rotisseries.

We pick up seeded bread, yoghurt, peanut butter, wine. Then stop at Roses, unable to resist the last lamb kleftiko of the season. The owner, a Turkish Kurd who has known us for years, comes over to shake hands. Are we coming or going? Coming back this time. Business was very difficult during Covid, but this is the most serious we’ve seen him. Save your money, he says. Times may be bad.

Check online re the current verboten list for foods coming into Canada with snacks in a carry on in mind. Meat - no. Cheese - OK. Walnuts? Refer to AIRS, i.e. ‘Automated Import Reference System - Canadian Food Inspection Agency’. So dutifully google “AIRS” and “nuts”. And hit “Mexican TV outlet accidentally airs man’s testicles during solar eclipse coverage”. Well, fair enough, I guess.

Monday, 28 April 2025

Monday, April 28/2025

Photo from October 2023 visit

Out to West Harrow to see Jean.  She turned ninety on New Year’s Eve. Did try phoning her at the time but had been unable to get through.  Tease her about being out celebrating and that was probably true, although not with the champagne I suggest. Her nephew and nieces came over from Canada and the US and they did go out for a meal.

We’ve known each other for sixty years this fall and it will be over thirty years since I first brought J out here - numbers that just seem ridiculous.  Good to share a glass of wine and a chat on another sunny, warm day.

Back at our Airbnb J cooks us a lovely tuna steak. We’d been walking past it in Sainsbury just as the man marked it down - from £7.95 ($14.77) to 69p ($1.28). Perfect timing, and, as it turns out, a perfect piece of fish at the end of the day.

Sunday, 27 April 2025

Sunday, April 27/2025


London in flower. Always arrive too late for daffodils, though there might still be some in the north. Pass this wisteria on our way down to the high road and Jenny also has a lovely one in her front garden. 

Kilburn High Road bustling today. Temperature about twenty and Saturday shoppers everywhere. We’re renewing acquaintance with the road and picking up a few things - oatcakes, streaky bacon.

Election day in Canada tomorrow. First time not to have voted but too difficult to get a ballot and return it in time, Did have them couriered to Larnaca in the South of Cyprus for the January 2006 election but both courier and postal services somewhat simpler there. Just as easy to follow news almost anywhere in the world, though, barring the inconvenience of time zone changes. Which reminds us of the “olden days” when Canadian election results were blacked out for regions where the polls had not yet closed, so you could not see results in time zones to the east of you before the polls closed in your region. The system didn’t survive the coming of the internet for long.

But we’re prepped. We’ve watched the This Hour has 22 Minutes Election Special.








Saturday, April 26/2025


To Thames Ditton to see Jenny and Doug, among our very favourite people to visit. Exceptionally good connections via Jubilee and a lovely day for sitting in the garden. J&D recently back from a relaxing Caribbean cruise and Doug pleased to demonstrate his newfound expertise in preparing aperol spritzes, the temperature providing good reason for summer drinks.


Emma drops by with Jasmine and Noah, whom we’ve known since birth. Jasmine preparing to write her GCSE exams in a couple of weeks. She’ll probably do brilliantly despite her worries.



Before they leave Jenny brings out a trifle - quite the nicest I’ve had, although failed to get it to pose for a photo op before we had made significant inroads.


Slightly surprised to see our leisurely luncheon visit has stretched nearly to seven. Jenny walks down to the station with us. Cheerful goodbyes as this time we’ll be back soon.







Saturday, 26 April 2025

Friday, April 25/2025

 

Had not been overly optimistic re the WiFi but, happily, the girl in charge of the bnb does follow up. Texts that someone will be round in an hour and is promptly with us, cheerful young woman, quick on the uptake, and technically good. I tell her I’d choose WiFi over a fridge and she says ‘Oh so would I - you can always go out to eat”. And we have WiFi. Without which it’s becoming impossible to function. Want to check a train time? It’s online. Could call the station. Where do you get the number? Call the operator? You’re joking. Take a bus to the station and inquire. They will tell you - but no longer hand out the convenient little pamphlets with train times. You can get the info online.

Down to Aldi for basic food and then across to a street corner market for oranges, grapes, bananas and peppers. But we pass Roses, now a five minute walk from our new flat, and inquire. Yes, the kleftiko we have been eating there for the past fifteen years is no longer a weekly special. It has a regular slot on the menu. The best we’ve eaten anywhere, including Cyprus.

So back at dinner. And it’s still a winner. A couple of regulars also in the restaurant but it’s nearly empty. As are the neighbouring establishments. Can only hope they stay in business but the economy is in trouble. People are hurting and eating out is one of the first things to go. Sixth largest economy in the world, but not very evenly distributed.

Kleftiko, as always, butter soft, and too much to finish in a single sitting. £ 14.95 ($27.60 CAD). Includes tax, so equivalent to $24.40  plus tax.



Friday, 25 April 2025

Thursday, April 24/2025


Moving day. Ozy’s taxi prompt as always at six AM. Not much traffic on the road this early and a spectacular sunrise over the Mediterranean, which we usually contrive to miss, in part because we don’t have any view to the east.


Turkish Airways desk not yet open. However the scales at the check in desks are operational and there are a few people weighing their suitcases. Including one family engaged in much repacking as brightly coloured clothing repeatedly transferred from one overflowing case to another.


Istanbul is one of the world’s largest airports. Memo to self to download map of same. Enormous distances and also has no apparent means of keeping those with connecting flights airside, thus duplicating passport control, security checks, etc. One employee puts it down to being the main transfer point for the Middle East and getting passengers from troubled countries. J more than dubious that this accounts for all inefficiencies. Can at least say that this means that flight days are not days of no exercise.


Heathrow, by comparison, spectacularly quick - at least for those with chipped passports. Tube predictably crowded in late afternoon but then ten minute walk to Airbnb. Spot street sign despite obvious deficiencies. Location super. Flat ok. And then - no working wifi. Text manager. As yet unresolved….

Wednesday, 23 April 2025

Wednesday, April 23/2025

 

Wind up time always strangely fragmented. 

Doors are open in the flat, as the temperature is mid-twenties. So J discovers an unknown cat lying on the bed - and in no particular hurry to leave. Later seen on the patio staring at the window.

Flat seems a repository for items of unknown provenance and no probable use. Why do we have a wet wipe packet from Egyptair? Last flew Egyptair in, I think, 2009. Wet wipe has not apparently come in handy since and is undoubtedly not still wet.

Meanwhile my orange comb, which would come in handy has disappeared. OK, it was old and missing a couple of teeth but it was also the only one that would actually go through my hair.

And why are customs regulations so wildly different? Could take four litres of spirits PLUS eighteen litres of wine PLUS forty-two litres of beer EACH into UK from wherever. Clearly expecting van and not suitcase bearer. But into Canada 1.5 litres of wine OR 8.5 litres of beer OR 1.14 litres of spirits each. Not that anyone actually sells 1.14 litre bottles of alcohol abroad. And no, buying a 700 ml bottle of whisky plus miniatures will never work out to 1.14 either. You’ll just be cheated out of the .14. And limited point to taking eight litres of spirits to the UK and drinking like crazy to get it down to two litres before heading for Canada. 

The pleasures of multiculturalism.











Tuesday, 22 April 2025

Tuesday, April 23/2025

Courtesy Itour

Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God never did”. Attributed to Dr William Butler, 17th century English writer and quoted by my father every strawberry season. Not usually called to mind when eating strawberries shipped in from Mexico or other distant parts. But fresh picked local strawberries….The ones I used to eat in Nova Scotia or the ones we were surprised to find at a farmhouse lane in Alberta once in late summer. 

In North Cyprus there are two strawberry seasons. One in the spring - April and May - and  one in the autumn. You can pick your own at a strawberry farm. But at the supermarket you can often choose your own one at a time from the large flat, not an unripe one in the lot and the scent an aphrodisiac. Which we did today.

Monday, 21 April 2025

Monday, April 21/2025


In Krakow when Pope John Paul died. He was a local boy as well as pontiff. Supported a local football team. Didn’t really expect to see his warmth again. And at the time said that I didn’t care who they chose as long as it wasn’t Ratzinger. So, Cardinal Ratzinger duly became Pope Benedict days later. We were in Larnaca when Pope Francis was elected. Remember looking at each other and saying who? But couldn’t have been luckier. May we be this lucky again. The following is from a FB page. Posted by Dorothy Lennon whom I don’t know:

This morning, Pope Francis passed away. The leader of the Roman Catholic Church was someone who was unafraid to oppose war, neoliberalism and stood with the oppressed of the world. In the obituaries written about this wonderful man, here is what they won’t tell you…

1. His Holiness stood with those who were victims of injustice. That is why Pope Francis met with Wikileaks founder Julian Assange’s wife, Stella when he was imprisoned and psychologically tortured by the British government. It was an endorsement of Assange’s plea for freedom.

2. The Pope saw our neoliberal system as one that exploits the poor and working class for the gains of the oligarchy. He called unfettered capitalism “the dung of the devil.” When the pandemic ravaged the world, he criticized capitalism harshly, “The fragility of world systems in the face of the pandemic has demonstrated that not everything can be resolved by market freedom,” he wrote. “It is imperative to have a proactive economic policy directed at ‘promoting an economy that favours productive diversity and business creativity’ and makes it possible for jobs to be created, and not cut.”

3. As Israel committed a genocide in Gaza, the Pope didn’t hold his tongue. When a Catholic parish in Gaza was attacked by Israel, he labeled the action terrorism. “Some say, ‘This is terrorism. This is war.’ Yes, it is war. It is terrorism,” he said. “That is why the Scripture affirms that ‘God stops wars… breaks the bow, splinters the spear’ (Psalm 46:10). Let us pray to the Lord for peace.” Before his death, he called Israel’s actions genocide and called for further investigations, “According to some experts, what is happening in Gaza has the characteristics of a genocide.” In his final speech, he called for a ceasefire, “I appeal to the warring parties: call a ceasefire, release the hostages and come to the aid of a starving people that aspires to a future of peace." 

4. After several trips to the hospital, the Pope told the world he should not be the only one allowed to receive healthcare. It should be a right of all people. "A world that rejects the sick, that does not assist those who cannot afford care, is a cynical world with no future. Let us always remember this: health care is not a luxury, it is for everyone," the Pope said.

5. The holy leader’s condemnation of the military-industrial complex was so vociferous and strong, he suggested those who participated in it could not enter heaven. There are many examples of the Pope expressing anger at arms manufacturers. “Why so many powerful people do not want peace? Because they live off wars!” he said, explaining to these children that some people make money by producing and selling weapons. “And this is why so many people do not want peace,” he said. “They make more money with the war!” In a separate Christmas address, he called weapons makers, “merchants of death.” He explained to the crowd, "It should be talked about and written about, so as to bring to light the interests and the profits that move the puppet strings of war," he said. "And how can we even speak of peace, when arms production, sales and trade are on the rise?"

6. The Pope was unafraid to stand against American hegemony and push peace. Early in his papacy, he used his diplomatic efforts to demand the United States lift the embargo against the Cuban government. For a brief time, the efforts of Francis worked. President Obama met with Cuban leader Raul Castro to begin a new chapter in economic/diplomatic relations. This progress was overturned by the incoming Trump administration. When the conflict between Russia and Ukraine began, the Pope offered to have the Vatican host peace talks, but he condemned NATO for provoking Russia. 

7. His Holiness was the first leader of the Church to demand care of the environment be an official part of Catholic doctrine. His condemnations of the fossil fuel industry terrified them. In 2018, executives from the industry flew to the Vatican to plead their case to the Pope and ask for leniency. It didn’t work. Pope Francis would use his words and encyclicals to call for an end to climate destruction and demand a healthy planet be handed over to future generations. 

Today, I with millions of Roman Catholics, mourn the loss of this beautiful soul. As he lived humbly and well below his means, he continued to do what he said he would do: transform the church into a field hospital. An institution that didn’t pontificate from far away. Instead, an institution that went to the victims of war, capitalism and neoliberalism and saw them as wounded children of God. 

He lived and personified the words we find in Matthew 5:9, “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God.” Let us all try to find the strength and courage within us to be peacemakers and create the Beloved Community many dedicated their lives to building. 

Today, I say to a noble peacemaker such as Pope Francis, “Now cracks a noble heart. Good night, sweet prince, and flights of angels sing thee to thy rest.”

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Sunday, April 20/2025


Flowers everywhere in this country. Even in the stone walls, which always remind us of the dry stane dykes in Scotland, although they’re not the same. The ones in Scotland are tributes to an ancient craft, a craft that’s being revived like roof thatching in England. And dry stane dykes really are made of dry stones. No mortar at all, just perfectly fitted. A dry stone dyke properly constructed and maintained can last for over a hundred years. Some in Orkney - a place still on my bucket list - are over four thousand years old.

Canada not quite competitive with Orkney but does have dry stone walls over two hundred years old, The lack of cement or mortar actually an asset as the craft allows for minuscule movement without the stones breaking apart.

Saturday, 19 April 2025

Saturday, April 19/2025


Wooden cutting board with sesame and nigella seeds. From cutting sourdough loaf studded with same. The sesame seeds look like sesame seeds. The nigella seeds, though, look remarkably like mouse turds. Not that we’ve ever had mice here.

Rodents not unknown, though,  and there are undoubtedly rats in the fields but the feral cats do a pretty good job of keeping their numbers down. In fact locals have been known to point out that feeding homeless cats gives them little incentive to kill rats and snakes. Actually there’s often a fair cultural difference between Cypriots and British expats re animals in general.

Though it was a Scandinavian women who was appalled by the name of a little charity shop in Larnaca - Curiosity Killed the Cat. Tried explaining that it was a childhood rhyme and that the following line was a more encouraging‘satisfaction brought it back’ but she was clearly unpersuaded. For who would joke about the death of a cat?

Reminiscent of the unfortunate Canadian in England totally unable to convince a horrified local that her Dead Dog Café sweatshirt was a tribute to Indigenous satire on Canadian public radio. Some things just don’t translate well.

Friday, April 18/2025

 

Afraid that Good Friday not particularly abstemious chez nous. Last day of Alexander next door’s brief stay here, although he will be back. Think he actually doesn’t spell his name with an X in it, but then in Russian he would use the Cyrillic alphabet. 

Once more, his shrubs flowering much more abundantly than ours. Think ours are suffering from lack of rain, but can’t imagine it rains more next door. 

Ask him in to say goodbye, and, since he enjoys good whisky, to share a drink. And a second….

Thursday, 17 April 2025

Thursday, April 17/2025

 


Bill to pay at town office. Would like to know before walking over whether it is payable by Mastercard. Message them to ask. Reply comes about three days later - well, fair enough as I have obviously not messaged in Turkish and it may have taken a while to find someone who wanted to respond in English. However, reply is: ‘Can you paint?’

Possibly a reply intended for someone else, like a contractor, but seems a little short, in more ways than one. And what response could I give? ‘No artist but have done an occasional satisfactory job on a wall’? We decide to walk over. A little over a kilometre and it’s a lovely day - especially on the shady side of the street.

Meet a couple en route. The man begins by asking if we speak French. The truthful answer is a little less every year, but am Quebec born and bred. They’re pleased as their English probably slightly less than my French. So short discussion on what to see and how to get there. Realise later we haven’t found out where they’re from - probably France or they would have said.

And then the municipal office. Very pleasant and they do, like - almost - everyone else take credit cards.

Slightly different route home, which includes, as often in our village, a lovely ruin. Not necessarily ancient but an aesthetic pleasure.











Wednesday, 16 April 2025

Wednesday, April 16/2025

 


Flunked out of med school?  Corner of a field unofficially, and probably illegally, used as an informal mini dumping spot. As usual my eye is drawn to books. Gray’s Anatomy is a Turkish edition but several other hardcover medical and pharmaceutical reference works are in English. Hard to imagine anyone possessing these and not wanting to keep them for reference or sell them to someone beginning a similar course. Loose handwritten notes scattered as well. Hadn’t been there long as we’d passed the spot a couple of hours earlier and they weren’t there then.

Curious about the backstory. Did once know of a woman not entirely in her right mind who destroyed her husband’s unfinished doctoral thesis.  Maybe she had genuine grievances.

Did we score a couple? Of course. You never know when a good reference book will come in handy. And illustrations larger than a mini iPad screen.


Tuesday, 15 April 2025


Commandaria, produced in Cyprus, is frequently lauded as the oldest wine in the world with a name. A bit of an odd designation but then identifying the oldest wine would be impossible. Wild grape vines have grown around the Mediterranean for millennia, though the oldest scientifically identifiable traces of wine on pottery come from the area between the Caspian and Black Seas and date back 8000 years. As the technology develops more may be identified as archaeology continues to rewrite history. And undoubtedly the first wines were accidental (and not likely to be too impressive). Wine production came somewhat later.

But Commandaria is old. References to a sweet Cypriot wine go back to the eighth century BCE, probably referring to Commandaria. And it was served at the wedding of Richard the Lionheart in the twelfth century. (He had somewhat accidentally conquered Cyprus when he was shipwrecked there on his way to the third crusade). Not usually a fan of sweet wines but as a dessert wine it’s quite nice, rather like a decent port.

However, the Commandaria of old was not what is produced today. By the Venetian regime in the fifteenth century Commandaria was exported throughout Europe where port and sherry were already popular. However, once Cyprus came under the Ottoman Empire wine production went into decline although people continued to make it for personal consumption. Muslims were not supposed to drink alcohol and regarded wine sales merely as a good method of raising taxes. Once the British were back in control in the 19th century Commandaria was in production for export again. But by then the ancient techniques had been lost. The British adapted techniques from fortified wines and aged the wine in previously unknown oak barrels. It’s good, and it achieved a protected designation of origin, but it was then required to consistently meet the same strict criteria of the British era.


Now some brave winemakers are attempting to make the traditional wine using large clay pitharia, some as much as three hundred years old, and trying to recreate the traditional techniques. An experiment in its early stages, but should be interesting.

Monday, 14 April 2025

Monday, April 14/2025


Sadly, fields are turning into building lots for apartment buildings. This space, just north of our little supermarket, was all tall grass, wild flowers, and even a few wild herbs a week ago. Then suddenly the grass had been cut, the daisies were gone, and roughly metal frames with chipboard were lining the edge of the dirt lot. Backing for large advertisements of flats in the making? Maybe. That wouldn’t be unusual. Hard to complain when we are staying in a flat that others might wish to do the same. A little like seeing the shopping mall in Bucharest and regretting the disappearance of the old carts pulled by oxen. Not that we ourselves would prefer to be deprived of modern methods of transportation or be limited entirely to goods that are locally produced. But still….

Sunday, 13 April 2025

Sunday, April 13/2025


Snail on the patio tiles after brief morning rain. Flowering shrubs by the wall reflected in the tiles. 

Snails should be the traveller’s symbol. Everything travels with them. House stylishly decorated. And move faster than snail’s pace might suggest. Have noted before that if you want to take a snail’s photo you may find that by the time you get a camera he has moved to a less photogenic spot.

Apparently speed typically about a millimetre a second, which isn’t exactly speedy, but still amounts to 60 millimetres - read six centimetres or 2.4 inches a minute. So two feet in ten minutes. Round the corner and disappearing from sight in an hour.

Should have thought that the patio tiles provide pretty slim pickings when there is plenty of lush vegetation around but presumably the snail knows best. There are often snails on the sidewalks after a rain. And then not all vegetation may be suitable. The oleander along our wall is pretty toxic - as in don’t eat, handle, compost, or burn (and inhale the smoke). If it grows out of control find somewhere else to live? But that’s humans. May be ok for snails.

So back to our lone snail out on the tiles. Looking for a mate? Obviously can’t share a house but has some advantages in the search. No need to worry unduly about gender as most snails are simultaneous hermaphrodites (must be a known condition despite my previous ignorance as predictive text knew what was coming). Means, apparently, that “when two snails meet they can readily engage in sexual reproduction, with one releasing the sperm gamete and the other releasing the egg gamete”. AI helpful here but not inclined to explain how the decision is made re who will play which role. Is there a dance or what? As usual, the more you find out the more there is to wonder about.



Saturday, 12 April 2025

Saturday, April 12/2025


 
Happy to see the winds die down. Makes for a lovely walk down to the market. Busy market this morning. Miss the woman who used to  come with honey and eggs. Can still buy free range eggs there from Tina but sadly no local honey. 

Used books and CD’s sold by the cancer and animal rescue charities. Some baking. Produce on a somewhat unpredictable basis - this definitely isn’t the weekly market of Girne or Gazimağusa fame. Clothing, both new and used. Plenty of crafts. And - sold by people who undoubtedly have no idea what cultural appropriation may be involved - dream catchers. Probably mass produced somewhere in Asia and pretty tacky. Have seen them in Cyprus before so they must be everywhere.


Friday, 11 April 2025

Friday, April 11/2025


Bottlebrush trees line the road heading down to our little supermarket. We used to see them in Larnaca but much less frequently. Here they’re a common sight. About ten to fifteen feet high and really cheerful. Oddly, I used to think of them as bottlebrush trees since that’s what they look like but was surprised to find that actually is their name - well, not the Latin one obviously.

Wind continues. Gale force 7. Not enough to prevent our usual Friday trek down to the Blue Song, though we do wear our windbreakers. As protection from the wind - it’s not cold or raining. J notes that the two flags on the mountainside that we use as weather vanes are missing. Damaged by wind or possibly taken down to prevent damage?

Thursday, 10 April 2025

Thursday, April 10/2025



One more sign of spring. Oranges are past their prime but not yet finished. Strawberries are at their best. Now loquats are not yet golden but beginning to ripen. The tree in the orchard across the road is laden and other trees in the neighbourhood have fruit conveniently overhanging the road.

Still crazy windy with gusts hitting gale force. Not impossible to walk outside, but no pleasure.

Email from our insurance agent. Heading looks interesting. Minor conviction protection coverage. So our insurance agents can protect us from minor convictions? Obviously not murder or grand theft, but say demonstrating without a permit (peacefully, no egg throwing). Turns out that isn’t it at all. For an annual fee they will ASSIST in paying fines for minor infractions. Last speeding ticket was circa 1980. Think I’ll take my odds.




Minor conviction protection.

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

Wednesday, April 9/2025


The house under construction opposite is putting in a septic system. Had noted the tank sitting ready a few days ago. Today entertainment provided by giant drill. Can only estimate the size of the drill but perspective provided by seeing the man sitting inside the cab of the machine. Guessing - joint effort - extended height of drilling apparatus about sixty feet.


.



Drill itself maybe four feet across.



Large pile of sand removed from hole as drilling takes place. 

Then seven large cement pipes lowered into the hole, one on top of the other, each about five feet high 


Cement lid lowered on top of last pipe.

Final step will be placing septic tank on top of cement pipes.

Operator has the dream job of every small boy in the world - and possibly some not so young.

Tuesday, 8 April 2025

Tuesday, April 8/2025


 A couple of blocks away, just round the corner from our little supermarket, they’ve put up a small building. Rectangular. Concrete. Maybe two rooms. Looks more office than house. Think it’s office space for the local mukhtar, who has been operating out of the auto repair place where his ‘real’ job is located.

The term is originally Arabic, meaning ‘chosen’ but roughly synonymous with village chief.  Some of the functions of a municipal counsellor and some of a notary public, both with kindly paternalistic overtones. Mukhtars do exist within the official structure, registering births and deaths and confirming identity. The term, and role, entered Cyprus in the Ottoman period (Cyprus under Ottoman control from 1571 to 1878) which explains the existence of mukhtars in both North and South. 

The new building went up quite quickly and is being followed by work on what appears to be a parking bay - an excavation a few cars wide surrounded by a stone wall. In aid of which a couple of large piles of stones have been delivered. We noted this but thought the stones seemed a bit big for wall building. And today, as I pass, the sole labourer is working on wall construction. He’s not only fitting the rocks in but tarring them in place. Don’t know if tar is actually the adhesive but it’s definitely black and not cement coloured. And he’s using a pick to break the rocks into smaller pieces. A lonely job and one that leads one to wonder if it’s as well paid as it ought to be or whether it’s the hard labour part of a prison sentence. No overseer in sight though.

Monday, 7 April 2025

Monday, April 7/2025


Planned electricity outage today from roughly 0900 to 1600. So begins at about half past nine. Cooking is with gas so basically affects kettle, microwave and wifi.

And also water - sort of. As in the pump that brings it to the flat is electric but the water tank warming on the roof is gravity fed. Can be brought from warm to hot electrically.

But J notes the municipal workers outside. Investigation leads to info that they have turned off our water due to an underground leak in the pipe outside the building. Workers’ English not vastly better than J’s non-existent Turkish.

Stop at Doğan’s office and determine that he is aware of problems and all will be fixed today. Sounds satisfactory - and only slightly improbable. Jackhammers and all?

Home with strawberries and wine and - prudently - bottle of water. 

No sign of jackhammer wielders but knock on door turns out to be Alexander - neighbour from next flat, newly arrived back from Russia. Whisky and conversation on Alexander’s patio until electricity returns, somewhat belatedly but company cheerful enough no complaints.

Still no sign of jackhammers but satisfactory water flow from taps. Once more J encounters man outside - different man this time. Relative of Doğan? Our tank apparently filled and water then shut off. Genuine - jackhammer? - repairs tomorrow.

Slightly theatre of the absurd. Info obtained from other dramatic characters wandering stage right. Status as comedy or tragedy unclear. Alexander enters from previous production. Whisky moves from interval to second act. Sequel promised.

Sunday, 6 April 2025

Sunday, April 6/2025

 

Lovely outside for a drink and a read. And we’re joined by a very small friend sunning himself on the warm patio tiles.

We’re very lucky in how we split the year, with early autumn to early spring mostly in the Mediterranean and the other half of the year in northern Ontario. And yes, of course we know what we’re missing. We have friends and the internet and not all that distant memories. 

And we do know what we’re missing in Northern Cyprus as well. September is the only month in which we haven’t been here. In 2020, the year of the lockdown, we were here from March until August. And as climate change is making Canada stormier it is making Cyprus hotter.

In 2021 a study in Cyprus showed that the previous four years had been warmer than average. And it only got hotter. In July 2023 there were sixteen days in a row with temperatures over 40 degrees. A record broken in 2024 when July was the hottest month on record.

NASA says that a global temperature rise of 1.5 degrees means more heat waves, water stress over half the planet, declining food supplies and rising sea levels. And the Mediterranean will warm faster than the oceans, meaning declining marine life and increased coastal erosion.

Meanwhile we manage to avoid contributing to global warming by never using furnace, heater, or air conditioning. (OK, fireplace in shoulder season). But at admitted environmental cost of transatlantic flights. 

So a glass of wine and April Mediterranean warmth.











Saturday, 5 April 2025

Saturday, April 5/2025


There is no time in Cyprus when we are without flowers but spring does bring an exuberance. The beautifully scented orange blossoms are disappearing but the poppies, like these on our walk back from Saturday market are suddenly showing up everywhere.

Debate going on in the TRNC legislature over changes in the legislation regarding gambling. In particular the government is proposing to allow Turkish Cypriots to enter the North’s thirty odd casinos, which have so far been open only to those who do not hold a TRNC identity card, most obviously tourists, visitors from Türkiye, and those who have driven up from the South. Objections from the opposition seemingly mainly on the grounds that casinos divert money from the pockets of the country’s people in times of economic difficulty. Mixed feelings on this one. The opposition’s reservations are probably justified but to what extent should people be required to operate in their own best interests? Should it extend to what they eat? Or smoke? Or drink?

Friday, 4 April 2025

Friday, April 4/2025



 
Pass the donkey on its own, though presumably tethered, on our way down to the Blue Song. Last week it was in the same field but accompanied by its owner who was picking wild herbs. Stopped for a chat. Like many people around here he was happy to engage, though with very limited English (albeit significantly better than our Turkish). He was gathering fennel, accompanied by a fair number of small snails. Said he didn’t eat the snails although people in the south did. As they certainly do. But does that mean that he personally doesn’t happen to like snails or that they’re not normally eaten in the north? And if so, why not? There was an occasion a few years ago when a Turkish Cypriot citizen was apprehended crossing the border to the South with a sack containing ten kilos of snails. He was fined a hundred euros and the snails were destroyed - or so the customs inspectors claimed. But on what grounds? Were they considered live animals or uninspected meat and fish?


We collected a little fennel of our own. Not the roots - just the feathery bits. Minimal research establishes that wild fennel likes to grow in disturbed fields. Love the phrasing. Does the attention of a placid donkey qualify as disturbed? Seemed pretty peaceful.

Thursday, 3 April 2025

Thursday, April 3/2025


Currently three books in our read aloud shelf. The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Israeli historian Ilan Pappe. Extremely well documented, with origins going back to the beginning of the state, including minutes from meetings with Ben Gurion. Very good background but heavy reading in more than one way. We’ll finish, but slowly. Digital, so it comes with us.

Still in non-fiction, but a “real” book, is Aprons and Silver Spoons by Mollie Moran. It’s the fascinating reminiscences of a woman who was born in 1916 and at fourteen became an understairs kitchen maid at a grand house in London. She lived to be 96 and the memoir follows her life through to after the end of the war.

And book number three is fiction - The Bastard of Istanbul, written in English by Turkish British novelist Elif Shafak and translated into Turkish and a number of other languages. Uneven, but the best bits are very good. And of political interest as well. The family history of the main characters deals with the Turkish massacre of Armenians in 1915. A touchy subject at best in Türkiye and one that led to Shafak being charged with “insulting Turkishness”. The charge was dismissed due to “lack of insult” but conviction could have meant a three year prison sentence.

Wednesday, 2 April 2025

Wednesday, April 2/2025

 

More Sahara dust. Not the thickest we’ve ever seen but the most dense this year. Photo from our patio this afternoon is unedited.

We retired in 2000 and began travelling in December of that year. The biggest change in what is approaching a quarter century 😳 is in communication. 

Initially we were pleased to have begun our travels in the days of the internet. Huge step up from our honeymoon days in 1993 when we carried a little short wave radio and hoped amidst the crackle to find news in English. Then hoped it wasn’t Voice of America - slow reading for foreign language students and pretty CIA approved slant. Often it was hard to guess the language of a broadcast let alone decipher content. But the internet! Meant we could, in urban areas, find internet cafés and catch up on anything critical. That was how we found out that grandchild number four had been born (the others were either before retirement or during non travel season).  The first internet cafés were crowded, with grubby keyboards and often poor connections, but they seemed like a miracle. Sometimes the keyboards were unfamiliar, producing odd looking characters even when I abandoned touch typing and tried to focus on their alphabets.

Company varied. Our usual spot in Earl’s Court London full of Australian backpackers and foreign students, for whom it conveniently provided pay phones. Our first booking at a hotel in Cyprus was made from a pay phone at an Earl’s Court internet café. Other locations - for example North Cyprus later that same year - were full of young teenage boys playing online games and shouting encouragement at each other over my head as I crouched over the keyboard. 

Larnaca offered a more sedate café. And in order to attract more girls - who would in turn attract more boys - it offered a lower half hourly rate “for girls”. Have no idea what the law was before Cyprus joined the EU, but was pretty sure that after it would have been violating some regulation to advertise different rates by gender. But rather than dispute the principle I used to primly hand them the “girl” amount, knowing that I was not their target demographic - and that they would be unwilling to say so.

Maggi was responsible for finding us a free internet service in Larnaca. It was a student facility but didn’t require student cards for access. The downside - or one of them - was unbelievably slow computers, not all of which were operational on any given occasion. Oddly, they routinely ignored the posted age requirement - something like sixteen to twenty- five - but were brutally strict about the time limit. Half an hour max even if there were no other would be users in the building. And it was quite easy to use the first fifteen minutes merely getting online. Some censorship involved as well. Newspapers were verboten because they carried sports reports, on which students ought not to be wasting their time. Or gathering info to be used in placing bets? 

The Sunflower was the first place we stayed that boasted free WiFi, although at first only in the reception area. It wasn’t exactly high speed either - though better - and there was a certain low key humour to be had from listening to fellow residents loudly communicating with their relatives in other countries. The most amusing though was when Mr Andreas, the proprietor, asked me if I knew the password. Assuming he was being helpful, I said I did. Well, would I mind telling him what it was? And then in later years each flat had its own access. Though not always with ideal reception. 

Meanwhile in London we had graduated from the internet cafés, which were disappearing in any case. For a while we could drop in to the Canadian consulate, conveniently located in latter years off  Trafalgar Square. Long past the days when one’s embassy was a home away from home, willing to serve as a post restante address for travellers as well as dispense tea and advice. But it was prepared in the early days to allow use of a couple of computers for Canadians to check their email and ran to only slightly out of date copies of The Globe and Mail. And, somewhat surprisingly, when the Icelandic volcano of 2010 closed the skies the Canadian consulate played host to stranded - or in our case not particularly stranded - Canadians, allowing us to make phone calls as well as use the internet and actually serving coffee and quite decent biscuits. Have no idea whether they were shamed into this unprecedented hospitality by rumours of the generosity of other embassies and consulates but in subsequent years it was hard even to persuade them to allow one to come in and view their current art show - if indeed they still run to one. But by then we had graduated to the City of London Library at the Barbican. Where we took our first iPad mini (though not our first tablet) looking for a safe and quiet place to set it up. And that was followed by our Starbucks office. Internet free with the coffee and, at the Queensway location anyway, no need to hurry.

And now here we are in North Cyprus. Internet not at all bad, though trying to use it for VOIP has its limitations and there are occasional power cuts. But most of our books now digital and ones we’ve chosen rather than whatever a second hand book shop could provide in English. No more knocking the bottom out of suitcases hauling a library around. Plenty of news. Analysis from suitably non-mainstream sources. Even humour.

And communication. Before getting out of bed in the morning have WhatsApp messaged the man who delivers gas cylinders. (Everyone here has WhatsApp, including outfits like Turkish Airlines). Yes, he can deliver. Confirm price. Send small map along with address. By the time I have finished messaging to inquire about approximate delivery time, and before I have even considered combing my hair, his truck is outside.

A very different world. Though a tiny bit of regret for the days we spent wandering the globe as anonymous nomads. We wouldn’t have known if World War III had broken out. And there was something to be said for that.



Tuesday, 1 April 2025

Tuesday, April 1/2025


Online weather info:

‘Last night, a heavy desert dust cloud from Egypt entered Turkey, with Fethiye and its surroundings being among the first areas affected.’

There has been a fair bit of Saharan dust in the air lately but this graphic suggests it’s approaching with malice aforethought.



Meanwhile a second map also showing Rhodes (Rodos) and Fethiye - this time correctly positioned on land and not in the sea - shows rain, approaching Cyprus as is, no doubt, the thick dust. Can only hope that the resulting precipitation is not in the form of mud.


Temps still in the twenties so no complaints.




Monday, 31 March 2025

Monday, March 31/2025


 Honeysuckle threads its way through the lower branches of the orange tree on the edge of the patio.

Second day of Bayram celebrations. Think that banks and government offices remain closed tomorrow as well, Bayram having fallen on a Sunday this year. 

No real holiday from world tension of course. The Republic of Cyprus (South) delighted to announce that schools in Greece will be celebrating EOKA Day on April 1. EOKA was the guerilla organisation that fought not only for Cypriot independence from Britain but for political union with Greece. To quote from my blog of March 2/23:

EOKA was a terrorist organisation active from the fifties to the seventies whose aim was political union with Greece, pitting it against the British, Turkish Cypriots, and many fellow Greek Cypriots. While many independence movements have involved violence, EOKA was not an independence movement and did mean death for Turkish Cypriots. Independence was granted by the British in 1960, and the government of the Republic later outlawed the organisation, which had been responsible for civilian deaths and involved with the assassination of the American ambassador. 

The Americans may have forgiven or forgotten the indignities but Turks and Turkish Cypriots - many of whom were killed by EOKA - have not. Taking the celebration into the schools for the next generation seems unnecessarily provocative. 

So it seemed rather refreshing to see  headline in the TRNC’s Cyprus Mirror (North) reading ‘Erdoğan Vows Accountability for “Sabotaging” Economy’. Humility has never been his strong point and his unusual fiscal policies have seen the Turkish lira fall from seven to the euro three years ago to forty-one to the euro now. Making the Canadian dollar look like an investor’s dream. Takes only a few seconds though to realise that the accountability Erdoğan is vowing is not on his own behalf but a threat to the opposition. Sigh.

As journalist Robin Lustig put it the other day:

‘It was as long ago as 1996, nearly thirty years ago, that the then mayor of Istanbul, a certain Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, said this: “Democracy is like a tram. You ride it until you arrive at your destination, then you get off”. He stayed on that tram for a long time, but now he has jumped off. He has reached his destination.’