Dec 31, 2023

This will be the last post of the year

Temperatures dropped again so the turtles went back into hibernation, and the herons and carp left for warmer places for the cold months (carp don't go to different ponds; they dive deep then drop movement/metabolism). That's probably why I was so glad to see Peter the Kawasemi Friday--most of my park friends were gone for the winter.

When I went to the other side of the park the other day, I saw the greenhead mallards in the corner of the pond. Until last year, there had been a male-female pair, Junior and Maggie, who had become very good friends. But they didn't come this year.

I doubted any of these birds would ever trust me the way Junior and Maggie did. But maybe we could have some kind of friendship, I thought, and worked hard on the initial sketch, telling them I'd probably show them a finished drawing next week.

Dec 29, 2023

A SPECIAL LITTLE TREAT

In the past, whenever the Kawasemi's come, I make it a point to sketch its basic outline real fast, because I know it never stays very long.

This afternoon, tho', I saw the unmistakable blue bird on the branch and began sketching quickly, looking up from time to time to see if it was still there...but it stayed...and stayed...and stayed. For the first time since my coming to the park, I left to go home before Peter did! I guess you could say it was a visual surprise, and I went home in a pretty good mood. Thank You so much, Father.

Dec 28, 2023

BELLS--A FEW DAYS LATE

Here are some stanzas to a lesser-known Christmas carol, "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day":

1. I heard the bells on Christmas day / Their old familiar carols play / And mild and sweet their words repeat / Of peace on earth, good will to men

2. And in despair I bowed my head / "There is no peace on earth," I said / For hate is strong and mocks the song / Of peace on earth, good will to men

3  But pealed the bells more loud and deep, God is not dead, nor doth He sleep  / The wrong shall fail, the right prevail / With peace on earth, good will to men

4. Then ringing, singing on its way / The world revolved from night to day / A voice, a chime, a chant sublime / Of peace on earth, good will to men

     
      Make no mistake about it; man will not become gradually more noble to bring about an ideal world. The clarion declaration of the bells is of the reality that our God will take back this broken world and show us on THAT ETERNAL DAY all He meant it to be.

      Come quickly, Lord Jesus!

The second sketch posted today is of my son participating in our handbell choir special music when we were in Koriyama--so this is from a photo taken 15 years ago. Three neighborhood brothers came that day, and my daughter is also playing in the handbell chorus too, but Keima was the only one drawn.

Dec 26, 2023

WILL JUSTIN ENVY SHEPHERDS?


"Then you will think about guys like us, right?", Justin the bat seemed to ask. I didn't have an answer.

The popular Christmas story teaches that the God of Heaven was willing to stoop to the lowest rungs of humanity, came to the shepherds. The majority of humans then turn up noses at bats, spiders, snakes, insects, and slugs.

I wonder what kind of relationship the Son of man would've had with these creatures?

Dec 25, 2023

THAT WAS MY DAD!

"Did you know a 'Roy Oshiro'?"

"That was my Dad!"

Several weeks ago, after worship service, during our online fellowship, I found out one of my more elderly friends actually knew my father when he first went out to Okinawa. Her father was on the board of the mission under which Daddy sailed in 1955!

My online friend was Gwen Penner. Her father, Lee Fosmark, was one of the Fosmark brothers who helped establish the Evangelical Free Churches of Canada, and he pastored in Coaldale and was on the board of the Canadian Japanese Mission (with director Margaret Ridgeway mentioned earlier). "Roy Oshiro" had been one of their first missionaries. They'd often wondered what had happened to him. Well, now she's met one of the daughters God gave him!

Dec 23, 2023

WAIT; LET ME GET A PIC!

When I visited Okinawa last year, my MK "brother" Brian was there with his wife, and I posted a handful of sketches this past Feb. of time spent with them. One of them was of a restaurant dinner his sister Sharon treated all the MK's to.

Well, their younger sister Brenda couldn't come to Okinawa earlier in the year, but she and Sharon came to Iwatsuki in Sept., and we spent a few wonderful hours together at an eatery near the train station.

I took pictures and e-mailed my sisters about it right away. This is a sketch made from the last photo taken before they went up the eki steps to go back home.

Dec 21, 2023

But I Wanted to Draw the Tree!

Several months ago, people walking through the park would've wondered about the artist earnestly sketching the tree branch, unaware that she was trying to draw the insect perched on the other side. But today? There was NO insect, no bird, no flower, no nothing...that artist really was a little funny!

Well, to tell you the truth, there was a gnarled tree with foliage growing out of some openings near the bottom....there was nothing stopped on its limbs; but something about its line and texture held me hostage, found me whipping out my sketching things and putting down on paper what I saw in front of me. When I got home, I told Kinya about the drawing I'd done that day, telling him probably anybody who saw me wondered why I would want to draw a silly tree (there were mallards and egrets in the pond!)

Dec 20, 2023

MALLARD TRAIL

I know I just posted photos of turtles, so I should be posting drawings for awhile before showing photographs, but I found some old photos I couldn't resist, especially after my recent visits to the park and seeing most other animals are disappearing now, leaving the mottled duck--what I used to call the spot-billed mallard. Here's something I found of the ducklings when they were still swimming with their mother, altho' they grow up really fast, and you can't tell them apart from the adult ducks anymore.

Behind Mama Mallard: 2 ducklings? No, 3!

No, at least 4

1,2,3,4,5

See? There are 6 of us!

Dec 18, 2023

DANDELIONS FOR MIDORI

Does anybody remember the story "Flowers for Algernon"? Well, these Dandelions are for Midori. Oh. Sorry Midori. She's not a white mouse, not even an animal. But a good friend who likes dandelions, so I thought I'd send these to her. She wasn't the one that died, but her mom and dad passed away rather suddenly and unexpectedly last month.

Two years ago, I happened to make this hedgehog drawing for someone who had one for a pet, and I found out Midori liked dandelions. She told me she really liked the picture and then suggested adding floating dandelion seeds for atmosphere. Expensive, exotic, prize-winning flowers were not what she was interested in, Midori said, but simple flowers like dandelions. They seemed so common yet were quietly, surely, sweetly sharing life all over the place. Midori battled depression pretty regularly. But sometimes she said some really good things that made you think.

My drawing of the flower? I realize I goofed something royal when drawing the leaf; I should've drawn it attached to the stem at the ground growing UP. I wonder if that's another reason Midori likes the dandelion; because when you're down, you want to look up--well, sometimes, that's all you can do. Anyway, would you pray for my friend Midori who lost both her parents within a month's time?

Dec 17, 2023

SEEING TURTLES

Splat! I remember one time when making pancakes in Koriyama--I'd put in some apple the way my husband and son liked but then forgot to put butter on the pan so that when I turned it, the heavier-than-usual-batter could do no less than ruffle, form a little slope, seem to shiver a little (was it horrified at what the cook was doing to it?) I managed to save it (to eat myself), but some of the inside batter came out unevenly done, and in the end I had a turtle-looking confection. I don't think I could've made it again if I'd tried. I haven't seen a pancake like it since.

But when I went to the park yesterday afternoon, I saw on the opposite side of the pond--I mentioned the root branch where turtles basked for my Oct. 16 & 24 posts--shapes that looked like turtle shells. But that couldn't be. They'd gone into hibernation, and I'd seen very few turtles in November, none anymore in December. I thought about my July 24 post, in which I mentioned the turtle Rockette who came out of hibernation on a WARM DECEMBER DAY several years ago--could that have happened again? But it wasn't just one turtle; it looked like 2 or 3. I rushed over to the spot to take a closer look.

But as soon as they saw me, the fellas dove back into the water. Funny tho', that still made me happy, because that told me they were living, moving TURTLES, not leaves or rocks that had settled in that corner of the pond to play tricks on my eyes. Besides, when I looked up back across the pond, I saw half a dozen other turtles basking on the other side...yes, near the place I had just left to come here!

Dec 16, 2023

A WHILE

"Hey Junie, you need a picture? It's been a while." Peter seemed to ask as he came to Step Creek. I hadn't posted a nature sketch in almost a week--to him, too long.

"Okay then; if you'll hold still long enough, I'll draw YOU," I said, reaching for my things as I did. After I finished the drawing, I checked, and he was right: the last time the park made an appearance in my blog, it was Sunday, almost a week ago! It had felt like just yesterday...

How long, I wonder, do I let it go before tending to time with my Father?

Dec 15, 2023

SNOWBALL!

I wasn't going to show anybody this picture. I mean, his head looks like an egg! I've told you I've hoped doing drawings might help relationship with family members--but they probably wish I'd hurry up and get better with my art.

This picture is drawn from the winter Grampa and Grandma were still alive and living nextdoor. Keima "built his igloo" by piling snow against their front yard wall. Here he is getting ready to hurl a snow missile in defense of his ice castle.

Even with chattering teeth and frozen fingertips, back in the days when my children were small, as in this "egghead picture--winter brought snowball fights, tobogganing, and skiing. I used to hear talk of loving the winter season best for the bracing cold.

With "Global Warming" and with all the modern conveniences assuring comfortable surrounding, the harsh cold can be left outside, and is it just me, or does it seem like people have gotten softer, weaker? I used to wonder what it meant that God would want us to be hot OR cold, and I think I might be wrong, but I have an idea.

Dec 10, 2023

Huck, Shakey & Ray at Duck Pond

It sometimes pays to be small. The larger birds fell through the thin ice that formed on the surface of the pond. But the small Hakusekirei owned the "entire  rink" then and played to their hearts' content.

Perhaps we shouldn't bewail some of our seeming shortcomings. In God's wisdom, they may be reason for "entire rinks" of joy being ours.

I wonder if the Wagtail--that's the English name for this bird--doesn't look around and wonder why the other birds don't join him; it seems they just don't know what they're missing out on.

Dec 8, 2023

"COMMERCIAL"?

"The others are gone;" the mallards saw; "it's safe to go back," they hopped up onto the landing to resume posing for me!

The greenhead mallards had let me get surprisingly close to them to draw their picture, but as soon as other humans had neared the bridge, they'd jumped back into the water and swam away. "Well, it had been a fun experience while it lasted;" I thought then. "No one could really expect birds in the wild to...huh? They were back! I shook my head in disbelief but reached for my sketching equipment.

"Just pretend that was a little commercial," the mallards waddled back into the places they had been in before.

"Commercial?" No. Mallards don't watch TV; they couldn't have said that! I just imagined it, right?

Dec 7, 2023

SATISFIED?

When I got to Deeper Pond, Peter the Kawasemi had been diving into the water after fish, waiting for me. I think he just wanted to know if his picture was finished.

"Sorry it took so long Peter, but here it is," I said, showing him the drawing. I hope he wasn't too disappointed. In it, he's drawn smaller than in the last few sketches I've made of him, because I drew more park featuring mallards too.

Hm; I wonder if my satisfaction in life has to do with how important I'm made to feel or if others are highlighted and I get less credit?

to be continued tomorrow

I had to go to the park while it was still warm. After all, when I went to the park last week, Peter the Kawasemi had come out to pose for me. I thought living things would be gone by December and had resigned myself to drawing the garden lamp.

But onto a branch near the lamp, a bright blue bird had come--Peter the Kawasemi! And a few minutes later, several mallards splashed down into the pond.

"Us living things--gone? Ha!" They must've been honking and singing as I hurriedly (and happily) scrawled away a rough outline to do a real drawing later. But it got dark much too fast, so there was time to do only a very general sketch...this.

Dec 3, 2023

I ENDED UP DRAWING THIS

"Do you know words of a simple children's Christmas song to teach at the orphanage?" I was asked. A friend gives her time helping out at a Christian orphanage, and for Christmas, she wanted to teach a short carol translated into Japanese. "Silent Night, for example." I knew the lyrics by heart, so got it ready right away to e-mail to her. 

But in case the kiddies asked her the meaning of the vocabulary in the third line, "mabune" referring to the manger in which Baby Jesus was sleeping, well, I'd just draw a picture. I was just going to make it a simple cartoon explanation, but it went onto watercolor brush markers then color pencil and fineliner.

I guess God can surprise us with the way He outgives us.


Dec 2, 2023

IT DREW ME, THAT'S ALL

I guess some would say this is another boring drawing, since it doesn't have any person or even animal in it...this time not even a single significant central object of interest.

Kinya'd accompanied me to the park this afternoon and watched me sketch the beginning of a drawing including birds, but when I came home intending to finish what I started, I found myself drawing the color-filled Corner Cove instead.

I wonder if God is ever drawn to work on some of us, no matter how insignificant we seem.

Dec 1, 2023

MIME MIME

I should've named him "Cowboy" or "Rowdy". One of my carp friends was like the little boy who came home all cuts and bruises; who couldn't stay out of mischief; who you didn't dare put in good clothes because you knew he was going to get it torn and dirty before the end of the day. Mime Mime liked to play out deep; I could always spot his dorsal fin cutting the water when coming home.


On June 28, I posted a black & white Mime Mime, but a friend e-mailed that she thought I ought to save the picture and color it in.

Yesterday, it was a relatively warm day, so about half a dozen carp came out of hibernation and were swimming in the creek. Yes--Mime Mime was one of them. Here he is, in living color this time.

I wonder how many "Winters of Discontent" we'll have to see before we step into eternal light also.