Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Panda Farewell Party

 

Today Travalon did something really fun - he went to a farewell party at the zoo for one of the red pandas. They had brought in a new male after the previous one died, but he and the female are not interested in making baby pandas together, so they're going to send him to another zoo and bring in a different male panda. I get it, pandas - I wouldn't want to be forced to breed with some rando either. Travalon saw a couple of our Shamrock Club buddies there, and he made some videos of the pandas eating their special cake that were so cute that my coworkers were entranced. It got too late for me to make a movie of them tonight, but hopefully tomorrow. Here are some photos. 


The farewell card. Travalon signed it for both of us.


A hornbill who lives nearby.


As usual, the aardvark slept through all the excitement.


Travalon saw this event on Facebook, but Kathbert also alerted him to it. I, of course, could not attend because I was working on campus today. During my first meeting, I was annoyed by the sound of everyone's voice. My second meeting was canceled - yay! Just before my third meeting, I remembered that one person who attends is on leave, so I ran upstairs to 1111, the big FART 5 office, to ask her replacement to join us, but she was on a Teams call, and oddly nobody else was around. There were some sesame blondies, so I helped myself to one before going downstairs and sending her a message. She did get done with her previous call and joined our meeting, which only took 15 minutes, so then I could walk at lunch with Hardingfele before HER meeting. We walked in the Allen Centennial Gardens and saw fritillaries.


Hardingfele said, "I thought fritillaries were butterflies," and I said, "They are. But these are fritillary flowers. They're both named after a Latin word for a checkerboard." Or so I read. Then we saw one of those little white cabbage butterflies, and Hardingfele said, "Look - a fritillary!" but fritillary butterflies are big and orange with a checkerboard pattern on their wings. We did enjoy all the blooming verbenas. Everything is so early this year, which is surprising because it was cold for so long. I guess all the tornados woke the flowers up? 

One semi-miraculous thing did happen today: as I was on my way to work, I suddenly remembered that I was supposed to be watering my neighbor's plants, but for some reason I hadn't done it in... well, I couldn't remember. Since before Easter? It was hard to concentrate at work, but I called Travalon before he left for the panda farewell party, and he went to our neighbor's place and said the plants were still alive. He took photos and sent them to me, and I could see they were a bit stressed but nowhere near dead. Phew!!! After work I watered them well and picked off all the dead leaves. Why did I suddenly forget to water them at the same time as my own plants? My subconscious must have been trying to tell me, because lately I've been thinking about how Ma Hat once gave me a peperomia cutting that I set behind another plant so I couldn't see it, and by the time I remembered, it was withered up and dead. Or when someone I don't even know that well dumped a tiny aquarium on me that had belonged to a friend of hers who died, someone I never met, and I totally forgot she had done it for over a week, and by the time I remembered, the fish were all dead. They were just little tetras - I'll bet goldfish would have survived. They're resourceful. Both of those events happened decades ago, and I thought I was more responsible now, but even last week when I watered my plants in the plant room, and then the plants in the kitchen, and then the plants in the loft, I thought, "Is that everything? Yes!" Wrong!


Famous Hat

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Alumni Party at Garver Mill


This morning I had to get up early for an appointment, but all went well and it was done quickly. We saw these cute stuffed flowers there. They sure look happy!


We went down to the dock, but at first we didn't see anything other than Tux Duck asleep on our neighbor's dock.


Suddenly five cormorants flew in and landed on the river. When they swim, they only have their heads and necks sticking out of the water.





Also, here is a photo of two mallard drakes that Travalon took yesterday at Mendota County Park which is so sparkly that I have to include it.


We braved the road construction on Troy Drive to go to Governor's Island for a walk over lunch, but we may not do that again - the road is all torn up, and we can't figure out another way to get there. Travalon didn't think to bring his camera, but we saw ring-necked ducks and at least one blue-winged teal.

I had another busy day at work, then I left a bit early to go to an alumni event at Garver Mill. I dressed in a work outfit that has cardinal red, the school color, but everyone else was dressed like they were going to a football game. Worse, they had all come with people and were not one bit interested in talking to me, so I mostly talked to a guy I know who was working there. The event was advertised as having "trivia," so I thought it would be a game like Sunday, but it was just a sheet with multiple choice questions, and then they used those to draw for gift baskets, but you had to be present to win. They were out of pizza at first, but they did bring more. There were people wandering around the crowd handing out falafel and chicken skewers, but I must be invisible because they would offer them to the people around me and then walk away from me, so I had to say something to get any. We got a free drink voucher, but since I couldn't stay long and had to drive, I asked about a mocktail. They didn't have any, but they did have this wonderful hibiscus lemonade with some other flavors I can't remember offhand. There were also crackers and cheese, fruits and vegetables, and sugar cookies that weren't that great. Supposedly the band was going to play, but I never saw them before I had to leave for adoration. Since it was rush hour, I left earlier than necessary in case I got stuck in traffic, so then I just sat outside the church enjoying the weather, and that was a lot more fun than being ignored indoors. It was the perfect temperature, not too hot and not cold at all. Seabird tells me there is a city in China renowned for always having this weather, and that sounds amazing, but would you really appreciate it if you hadn't just survived unseasonable cold and three days of tornados?


Famous Hat

Monday, April 20, 2026

Belleek Castle Clare Tower

 

Today I had a very busy day at work. I had to take a phone call that was half an hour late, so I had no idea when I'd be free to walk at lunch and didn't bother to try to hook up with Hardingfele. But an email arrived that said my Castle Clare ornament had been delivered, and when I got home, there were four packages. It was like Christmas! Three were for Travalon, but he tells me two are presents for me. Here is my Castle Clare ornament.


Here it is between Blarney Castle and Nenagh Castle, with Travalon's antique map of Ireland in the background and the nameless castle tower on the right. (Thought I had gotten it in the photo more.) The big tower is a vase, and the smaller ornaments are all bells.


Now I am done getting Belleek castles, at least for now. There isn't really room for any more, although today I got a notice that my $150 gift card for doing health stuff at work is on its way, so potentially I could buy more. Do I need more? There are other castle ornaments, but I don't like them as well.

Also, my Blog Monster at work has faded, especially the hot pink, which has vanished.


As a reminder, this is how it looked when I first created it:


Guess I shouldn't have hung it up where the sun can kind of shine on it.

This evening I went to Moldy Jam, and lately the group has been half the size it used to be. I wonder why? I brought the fiddle this time, and the woman who can really play the mandolin asked which instrument I liked better, but I couldn't really say. We had a new person who was way younger than even I am, a graduate student who plays the banjo, and she had it tuned in D so for the first half of the jam we played in D. Then she retuned it to G, so for the second half we played tunes in G or E minor. I was having a tough time with tunes I didn't know, since the other two fiddlers would play harmonies instead of the melody, so I couldn't follow what was going on. However, when it was a tune I knew, like "Pig Ankle Rag," then I found the harmonies to be a lot of fun. I love songs with a lot going on in them, like some hip hop tunes and Baroque choral music, so when there was a lot going on with chords and harmonies in the tunes I knew, it was an amazing sound. It was kind of fun with only nine people, but still, I hope the others show up again soon.


Famous Hat


Sunday, April 19, 2026

Two Concerts in Episcopal Churches, a Ghost Train, and a Terrible Trivia Host

 

Travalon has provided some more photos of Tux Duck on our boat slip.



And also a wild-type mallard drake at Stricker Pond.


Yesterday we met Tiffy at the usual Park and Ride, then we drove to Wauwatosa because Just Bach was performing the same concert there as the one they did Friday night during the tornado. I always think of Wauwatosa in a rosy, golden light after my brief sojourn there last summer for Irish Fest Summer School, since I was able to walk everywhere, and we played so much music. Yesterday we went to the restaurant with the North Woods theme, and Tiffy knew it because she had gone there with her brother and his family over Christmas. The food is really good, and they play loon calls in the bathrooms. Then we walked to the chocolate shop, and this may really be why I think of Wauwatosa so fondly, because the chocolate gave me kind of a buzz. We had affogatos and truffles, but not whatever "tirimasu" is.


I am a fan of tiramisu, but we didn't get that either. Then Travalon dropped us off at Trinity Episcopal Church for the concert, which was supposed to last an hour. There were still several songs to go at four, and we had to be in downtown Milwaukee by five for our next concert, of Chinese music, so we snuck out between numbers. I felt a little awkward doing so, since I know several of the people in the group, but one of the leaders knew we were going to the Early Music Now concert, so he probably understood. It was such a good concert, and when Travalon said it would only take eighteen minutes to get to our next venue, I was so bummed: "We could have heard the whole concert!" I was all for sneaking back in, but Tiffy said, "We're out now, let's just go." 

Of course we got to the next place, St. Paul's Episcopal Church, with lots of time to spare, so we took a walk and admired these fritillaries in bloom.


Nothing like a checkerboard flower! This concert was also very enjoyable, but we were sitting way in the back, in the cheap seats, so we hoped to see the interesting instruments up close afterwards, but the performers rushed off the stage with them. Meanwhile, Travalon saw the Amtrak train and discovered a pedestrian bridge that used to be a railroad bridge.





He picked us up, and we went down by the lake and saw these cool clouds.


He told us about the pedestrian bridge, and how it has a light show called the Ghost Train after dark, so we went there and discovered it happens at 9 pm this time of year. We went to Indulgence Chocolate and got more chocolate (that we didn't eat until today), and then we had dinner at the Three Lions Pub, which was started by three actual British guys. We got done not long before the Ghost Train, so we went to see it, and while we did see the light show, we didn't hear the promised whistle and train sounds.


Today Travalon and I relaxed a bit after Mass, then I said I'd like to see birds but wondered if there was time before my first drum lesson of the new session, and he said let's check out a place nearby where there are often coots. And were there ever coots!







There were also two Tux Ducks, and one was almost black.



There was also a pied-billed grebe.



The straggling coots were rushing to catch up with the big group.



And we also saw a killdeer.


We had a ton of people at the drum lesson today, many of them new. My buddy from the other sessions was there, just back from Costa Rica. It was new for all of us, because we played a different kind of drum today, a big bass drum as we stepped back and forth. The guy who plays the little instrument like a ukulele never seems that impressed with me, but today he asked if I would be at the next Brazilian jazz session, and he said, "I heard you were killing it over there!" Oh, but I desperately need to practice! It's one thing to be a great sightreader at your first session, but there's no excuse for not having looked at the music since then. I definitely want to learn this music!

After my drum lesson, Travalon and I went to the East Side Club for a member event consisting of a pasta dinner and a trivia game. I should have taken a picture of the setup - it was a colorful stand with four spots for contestants. Travalon and I were a team against another couple, and we were pretty closely matched, but this wasn't the trivia I'm used to, it was identifying clips from movies, TV shows, and songs. Travalon was much better at it than I was. A couple of ladies who sat with us at dinner went before us, and they beat the team they played against, but the one lady was laughing about how terrible the host was - he was always playing the wrong clip, like he'd say, "Identify this TV show by its theme song," and then he'd play a clip of someone saying. "I am your father," or whatever, and then he'd go, "Oops, wrong clip!" The ladies told us we would have won our game if the host had been consistent about deducting points for wrong answers, since he did it to us and not the other team we played, but we lost by one question. It was hard to care, since it was so hilarious how bad the host was. Travalon went over to the prize table after we played, and I had to remind him that we didn't get to choose a prize since we'd lost, but he was coveting a Bucks baseball cap, so toward the end of the game I said since there were tons of prizes left, and nobody was paying attention, he should just take it. All the prizes were booze swag the club gets since they buy so much alcohol for the bar, and his cap said Jagermeister on it. During the game Hardingfele texted me to say they were all at band practice, and was I coming? but you will be shocked to learn I never made it to band practice. Next week.


Famous Hat
 

Friday, April 17, 2026

Third Tornado Warning This Week

 

I worked on campus today so I could go to two parties: a birthday party for Union South at noon, and a party on the Union Terrace to welcome the sunburst chairs back at three. However, the birthday party was on Wednesday, and the weather was bad by the time of the Terrace party, so it was almost a waste of time. Still, I did get to walk with Seabird in the morning and at lunch, and I was working on scholarships that were easier to process with the two monitors in my office than just on my laptop, if I'd been at home. Also, I got to hang out with Famie and three grad students to talk in Irish (well, mostly English) and sing a song in Irish about seaweed that was clearly about men hitting on women. The weather was beautiful, and Travalon had gone out on our dock and seen Tux Duck on our boat slip.


Travalon says, "He's always welcome there!" Though I have to tell you that Tux Duck chases away all the other mallards who come around, except for his lady love. (Not sure where she was when this photo was taken...) He's a very aggressive drake.

So anyway, Famie and the grad students and I were sitting outside talking Irish when the sun went away, the wind picked up, and then the boat warning steam whistle at the Union went off. It goes off an hour before sunset to let the boats know it's time to come in, but whenever it goes off in the middle of the day, that's bad news. It means bad weather is coming so get off the water NOW. I went back to my office and told my coworkers we should all head home, and they listened. While I was talking to them, Travalon called me, because he had gotten to work and they told him go home, the weather was too bad so the kids weren't coming today. He came and picked me up, and the traffic was horrible as everyone was heading home, but we got home just before the heavy rain started. I logged into work for another couple of hours, and just as I was logging off, my phone shrieked at me because there was a tornado warning. We went downstairs into the hallway, around the corner from the windows in the foyer, and I prayed a rosary while Travalon read a magazine. I was surprised that, while everything else was canceled tonight, the Bach concert I'd been planning to go to claimed it would still be happening. Did the tornado change that? But then I realized the same concert is happening in Wauwatosa tomorrow at three, and it's only an hour long while the concert Tiffy and I want to go to in downtown Milwaukee is at five, so we should be able to do both. Meanwhile, I am having a quiet Friday evening at home, now that the bad weather has passed by.


Famous Hat


Thursday, April 16, 2026

Driving Research and Ukulele Strum

 

Today I felt very unfocused at work, although I did manage to get quite a bit done. We had another meeting, and by the end I felt irritable and just wished everyone could shut the heck up. But I did have a fun experience this morning doing a research study on driving systems. It was like a video game where you drove, only at a certain point the car could take over and then you were supposed to do a second task while the car drove for you. At the end I got an Amazon gift card, then I was walking back to my office and saw all the preschoolers in the campus daycare playing in the sunshine. I noticed one little boy looking at me intently, so I glanced at him and he did look familiar, and then I realized he was the son of one of my bandmates. I said his name and he kind of ran off, but he seemed to be giggling so I don't think he was that scared or anything.

Meanwhile, Travalon took some photos of birds. Here are Tux Duck and his lovely wife.


He saw another Tux Duck at Mendota County Park, but he only had his cell phone.


He saw pelicans around the little island in Cherokee Marsh. You can see how they move in sync while doing their cooperative fishing.



Eek! I wouldn't get this close to them! Those things are HUGE!!










Travalon made a cool video of them swimming in a line along the shore of the island, which I will try to put on YouTube and post here soon.

At work he supervised the small children doing art projects. This first one is a cartoon by a kid who never wants to be at the club. "After all these years" - he's seven!


He made it double-sided.




This one is labeled "My brother" in Spanish.


This one is labeled "Me and Too." No idea what that means.


After work I went to the Lone Girl for the monthly ukulele strum, wearing my ukulele T-shirt and ukulele earrings. As we were playing, a train went by right outside and blew its horn in an entirely different key. Even though I only get to strum once a month, I am improving and can now play a number of chords without too much difficulty. It's funny that E7 is a pain on the ukulele, because it is on the mandolin too. It's the main reason I don't like playing in the key of A major. (A minor is fine on both instruments.) Wait, maybe A minor also uses an E7 - I'm probably thinking of modal tunes, where the other main chord is a G. We never play anything modal on the ukuleles, mostly old rock and country tunes with a 1-4-5 chord structure, and a few weirder chords thrown in today, but I'm having to sit out less and less chords. Progress! Then Travalon came up to hear us, and afterwards we had dinner. Always a pleasant evening out.


Famous Hat