Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Marg Clayton's cake recipe that everyone was asking about.

Clementine Cake

Place 4 or 5 clementines in a small pan and cover with water.  Bring to a boil.  Discard water. 
When cool roughly chop fruit, skin, pith & all.  Place in food processor till smooth.  
Add 3 cups of ground almonds, 1 1/4 cups white sugar, 1 tsp baking powder and 6 eggs.  Process to a smooth batter.  Pour into a 10" spring form lined with parchment paper.  
Place pan on a baking sheet and bake for 1 1/2 hours at 375 degrees or until cake comes away from the edges of pan.  Remove from oven.  Do not try to remove from pan till absolutely cold

Poems by Grant Thompson

II; The Show

The day’s winds have yielded the stage to the sun.
They have filled sails, held kites aloft,
Driven waves, carved stone, and hurled sand to
Scour smooth the bones of the earth.

The wind holds its breath.
The trees cease their waving and fall still and silent.
The water’s surface mirrors stone, trees and sky.
Expectant peace reigns.

They start to arrive, walking carefully over the rocks.
To witness sun’s final challenge to the encroaching darkness;
Golden pillar of light which will splash itself across the western sky,
Flames spread thinly then disperse and surrender to the dark,

This is dusk. Like the dawn
Neither day nor night has dominion here.
It is a pause, an intermission, to prepare for the next show.
Indifferent. Each one unique through the ages.

Still more arrive, finding their way by flashlight, feel, or familiarity.
They are quiet; respectful of the peace of others.
They carefully navigate around those already there
And lie down on the sun warmed rocks seeking twilight’s first jewel.

Purpling sky darkens slowly to pitch.  
As the sun and wind played their parts,
So now must the night serve its purpose;
A canvas, a backdrop for the final scene.

From an adjacent rock, a voice, words, overloud in the silence,
Shatters the stillness, “I’ve never seen it as dark as this outside our house……”
The voice trails off then hardly to be heard, yet filled with awe
“My God! Look at all the stars!”

Darkness is now complete.
No moon shines on the upturned faces
No moon overpowers His canvas.
There is a rustling, then, of voices, the whispers of indrawn breaths
As nothing less than the universe, all of creation, emerges from the darkness.


III; Night


Nothing exists at night
That is not there also in the day.
Why is there no comfort in that
When the shadows reach up
From the forest floor?

Let the night engulf you.
Like a creature of the dark woods,
Senses prickling with awareness
Listen what do you see?
Look what do you hear?

Night steals the colour from the world
Leaving only shades of black, gray and light.
Black reaches up from below
Blessed light from above
Gray bridges span extremes

Shadows twist, grow and fall.
Motion reveals forests’ foragers.
Gray flickers through canopy
Wise visage on silent wing glimpsed
through monochrome tangle.

And overhead the show continues.
Heroes, and hunters, dragons and royalty
On parade with Man’s other myths, circle endlessly
Until mornings mists obscure woods view,
When Sun and wind called anew.


IV: Morning

Morning is born in mist.
Damp cloak seeps into woods,
Clouding vision,
Obscuring truth
At the limit of sight, bear, boulder?

Sun slowly rises, gains strength,
Burns away mist off water.
Touches only treetops
Their feet enshrouded
Still in twilight.
         
Ripples on the bay
Dance with zephyrs kin.
Treetop leaves sound reveille
For the waking, taps
For night’s children.

Daylight’s own, recalled from
Dreams are slow to return,
Hear leaves call. Footsteps not their own,
Soft pads on crackling undergrowth
Following lair’s path to rest.

Wavelets on the bay.
Treetops gently bend
In the freshening air.
Sun’s beams slant through trees
To warm forest floor.

Brilliant sun and joyous winds,
Full awake,
Cast off damp cloak.
Banish mist’s clinging tendrils
From dappled woods.

Sparkling waves on the bay.
The new day challenges.
Bay’s mirror shattered
Til wind yields again
To the evening sun


Blue Water
By Grant Thompson

Rising from blue water,
Are the ageless bones of the earth,
The foundations of the world.

They don’t know years, or decades or centuries.
The passage of millennia, eons and epochs are recorded
 In the folds and layers of this ancient monolith.

In its existence
There is slight regard for the brief flickering of our passage
And yet our paths cross.
We are drawn to places where sky and water, wind and stone converge.

Some find a quiet place, shelter from the wind in a fold of rock
Some find an open place, stage set for the celestial panorama heralded by the sunset
Some find a high place, to hurl themselves out over deep sparkling water
          And for the briefest of moments, fly.

Rising from blue water,
Are my children, wife, families, friends,
The foundations of my world.

They don’t know eons, millennia and epochs.
What does time mean in this place?
In this place they know only now.

In their existence
There is slight regard for the eons it took to form these bones
Our feet wear paths into the earth’s foundation.
To places where sky and water, wind and stone converge.

Now in a quiet place, we read, play cards, sheltered from the wind in a fold of rock
Now in an open place, we lay, stage set for the celestial panorama heralded by the sunset
Now in a high place, we hurl ourselves out over deep sparkling water
          And for the briefest of moments, fly.



Poems by George Arnold


Breathe Deep

Breathe deep.
Feel the air as you fill.
Feel the peace,
the oxygen fueling you,
sharpening your thoughts,
steadying you for the task at hand.
Feel your lungs,
Feel your blood,
Feel your senses.

Now breathe out.
Express the waste, the joy, the thoughts
the senses, the feelings, the sentiment.
Saddle the breath with your art,
letting it ride out boldly,
fearless to whatever may await.

Words cannot be injured,
They are impervious,
They are important,
They are essential,
They are yours.
You are the poet,
breathe deep.

© George Arnold                November 24th, 2006


Poetic Divergence               By: George Arnold  

The rounded form of my rhyme
Plays smooth and eloquent
In the ether of my mind.
It casts elegant shadows
On parchment backdrops
But when released as thought
Into the world of free verse
Where angst reigns supreme
Amid a landscape of images
Of pain and despair
It tumbles out awkwardly
And is broken and shattered
Upon the splintered edges
Of what passes for art.

Copyright By: George Arnold Nov. 2003



The Universe Is Practically Empty

Now it becomes clear
as clear to the mind
as a high summer sky
to a vagabond eye

Surrounded by ether
there is no one to come
and none to seek
no rumble of traffic
nor civilization to create it
no singing of birds
on bough and branch
no mountain, 
rick or rill
to bear them shelter

Reality is expunged
abraded down to naught
its powdered bones
dashed from my sight
and splashed where they might
on homeless winds
that find no rest

Laying here
broken
bleeding
my spirit seeps away
fading to nothingness
I am alone in a universe
that is practically..
empty…

© George Arnold                Sept 30th, 2009.

based on “The Universe is Practically Empty” by Arnold McBay
from the “Surfacing” exhibit.



Monday, November 28, 2011

Breathe Deep
Breathe deep.
Feel the air as you fill.
Feel the peace,
the oxygen fueling you,
sharpening your thoughts,
steadying you for the task at hand.
Feel your lungs,
Feel your blood,
Feel your senses.

Now breathe out.
Express the waste, the joy, the thoughts
the senses, the feelings, the sentiment.
Saddle the breath with your art,
letting it ride out boldly,
fearless to whatever may await.

Words cannot be injured,
They are impervious,
They are important,
They are essential,
They are yours.
You are the poet,
breathe deep.
© George Arnold                                November 24th, 2006


Poetic Divergence

By: George Arnold

The rounded form of my rhyme
Plays smooth and eloquent
In the ether of my mind.
It casts elegant shadows
On parchment backdrops
But when released as thought
Into the world of free verse
Where angst reigns supreme
Amid a landscape of images
Of pain and despair
It tumbles out awkwardly
And is broken and shattered
Upon the splintered edges
Of what passes for art. 

Copyright By: George Arnold Nov. 2003




The Universe Is Practically Empty

Now it becomes clear
as clear to the mind
as a high summer sky
to a vagabond eye

Surrounded by ether
there is no one to come
and none to seek
no rumble of traffic
nor civilization to create it
no singing of birds
on bough and branch
no mountain, 
rick or rill
to bear them shelter

Reality is expunged
abraded down to naught
its powdered bones
dashed from my sight
and splashed where they might
on homeless winds
that find no rest


Laying here
broken
bleeding
my spirit seeps away
fading to nothingness
I am alone in a universe
that is practically..
empty…

© George Arnold                               Sept 30th, 2009.

based on “The Universe is Practically Empty” by Arnold McBay
from the “Surfacing” exhibit.

John Hastings' Poems

CRAZY HORSE REMEMBERED
John M. Hastings

mighty warrior spirit running free
    riding bareback
       your hair and horse’s mane blowing together
          through the plains winds of Dakota

‘til blue cavalry swarmed, tethered your people.
   less land, less buffalo, more rules, more white lies
      not little ones either…
         like the promise you’d be safe
            if you’d come to their fort to surrender.

how could they let you go when they had you in their grasp?
   you wanted to believe.
      in your soul you wanted your freedom back.

but going to the blue lair of blue liars
    you were betrayed by a bayonet in your back.
      their deceit won over your faith, your trust,
         your wishes for your people.

hearts still weep at Wounded Knee.



GOODBYE
John M. hastings

I see less of my family now
   cousins, aunts, uncles...
I call less often.

It’s not that I’m too busy.
    just...well...
just feeling more remote
   from those I love.
not less loving nor feeling for them
   but much less getting together.
Are we all drifting apart or just me?
Is it my way of saying goodbye
   while I am still here?


ONLY AN INSTANT
John M. Hastings

it takes only an instant
to tell you I love you.
it will take a lifetime to prove it.

it takes only an instant
to say the wrong thing.
it will take forever for you to forget.

it takes just an instant
to fall in love with your smile.
even a lifetime with you will not be enough.

it takes years to grow our children
but only an instant for them to leave.

it takes years to learn to live and love
yet only an instant to say goodbye.



The Illusion of Meaning
John M. Hastings

from the time we knew
   the sun was God
      then knew that it wasn’t

to the time we knew
   it revolved around our earth
      then knew that it didn’t

to now when we know
   our galaxy spirals a black hole
search for meaning in our existence
   has been endless and oh so imperfect

but what is meaning?
   atoms mostly empty
     support floors we stand on
chairs we sit on, buildings we occupy
   only sensed solid as molecular oscillation
      creates a hard wall of space

yet meaning based upon knowing
   provides little comfort
      for we cannot define the colour red
         describe beauty nor measure goodness
without a reference point, itself learned
    through limited sensory group-think acceptance
      remember our sun Gods?

and is life itself illusion?
   for our past exists only
      in memory and matter
then it exists no more
    its meaning lost...
                  in eternity




Friday, November 18, 2011

Paintings by Catherine Shane





Sylvia Collins Poems

The Sea Walk

Quicksilver sea flashes
hurts my eyes
shift 
to kelp covered rocks
Teeming tide pools
memories
Of other oceans
Others shores

On the sea walk
joggers, families, lovers
stroll
Brilliant flowers, palms and sea grass
Pebbled beaches
Grey and weathered driftwood logs
for water watching.

Westward
through the sun’s haze
the Island mountains rise grey blue
Their distant heights
Indistinguishable
from sky cloud ribbons
wreathed purple gold
at sunset

At my back
conifer clad mountains
merge
Wilderness joins city abruptly
down the North Shore's steep hills
While overhead
Ravens ride air currents.
© Sylvia Collins

















Water Watching

Out in the inlet

 Cargo ships with rust red keels
sedately wait

Feisty tugs carve duck V wakes
past Stanley Park

Yellow and bluebox laden
merchant vessels
plough towards the open sea

Raucous cries from seagulls
announcing ‘Coral Princess’ 
cruising shore close
multi-decked and stately
bound for iceberg glory
in Alaska.

Suddenly

Rain falling straight and hard

City and ships vanish
to reappear a minute later

The curtain rises
on sun flecked
white capped waters
Rhododendrons and Azaleas
brilliant pink and showy at the shoreline
as the cars swish past on Bellevue.

© Sylvia Collins







Symphony of Fire

Roman candles shower light
in concert with the violins
Catherine wheels spinning
spinning
Rockets explode
cymbals clash
Brilliant colour
Bright white light
illuminate the night
eye dazzling dancing flares
mirror imaged in the water
This vivid musical display in July
far removed
from January’s silent grey
when Toronto's Island ferries
slice through ice.

© Sylvia Collins
Night's Inception

We watch together you and I
As daytime fades at cocktail hour
When azure sky turns crimson red
It  never  fails to overpower 

The colour palette slowly morphs
To gaudy hues that hurt the eyes
Blanketed in thought we stand
At the dying sun‘s demise

Lakes and oceans turn to blood
With sky as if in celebration
A last hurrah to entertain
A pyrotechnic adoration

Then another show is staged
As water picks up silver streamers
Black and white shades of night
Softer quieter made for dreamers.


© Sylvia Collins


Antigua by Jean L. Burbridge

Antigua
 January 2009
The six o’clock  bee
Serenades the Island
In jungle-thick gardens
Of exotic plants.
Warm, dark nights caress
My winter-weary skin
Life lifted in sunlit 
Hands of tropical peace.

The Kiss by George Arnold

The Kiss


Blood red passion fills us up
inflamed as we are
leaning in and over life
but the bubble of love
and all the bumps that exist within
interrupts and intercedes
invades and abrades
leaving behind it
a thin and drying trail
dripping
slowly dripping
while the pool
 of our life
and our desire
coagulates below


© George Arnold                               Sept 26th, 2009

based on The Kiss (2) by Susan Wintrop from the “Surfacing” exhibit

Orion Evening by George Arnold

Orion Evening


The spring night sky is cool,
Dark arms thrown wide in embrace
Soft jazz its apparel
An upright bass the muted pulse
The night air caresses you,
Soft and cool against the skin
The saxophone breeze,
Slightly smoky,
Wafts across xylophone stars
The percussion of distant motion
Cuddles gently against the cheek
Cool comfort reverie
As you surrender your vigilance,
To black satin fantasy


Copyright By: George Arnold   

Mind Shots by George Arnold

Mind Shots

I can see them now…. I suppose we all have them

Buried deep inside
like our personal loops of celluloid
documenting our lives
our emotions and
our experience

Nameless… frameless,
visual impressions,
of what we have seen
of what we have been … and been through

Like my life,
mine are blurred
but concentration
brings out the content
even if detail is elusive

The dark and stormy rocks of the shores
the rolling fields
the roads I have travelled
are all there
preserved for perpetuity
in the dark chambers of my mind

And the water
…..oh the water
the very sense of  urgency
the flow of my spirit
runs … flows … foams … and seeps
through all of it
even where its revisionism has been resisted
laying on their surface
thin … beaded … opaque
unable to penetrate
the history before it.

I don’t have names
for these panels … these cells … these internal microfiche
they simply exist
untitled, unheralded, silent testaments
to a lifetime lived … a world experienced

Waiting for me to return and study them again.

© George Arnold