I promised food pictures from the dinner party. Sorry, folks, it didn't happen. Right after our friends arrived I took this one but then I was in the visiting/cooking mode and forgot about the camera. So I'll just have to report on how the evening went.Right after this picture was made we adjourned to the terrace and watched the sky darken....of course talking all the time. Barry and Tracy had not met Patricia and Don before even though we all live in Colonia San Antonio. I ran down the stairs a couple of times to get the oven going but when it was time to put in the rack of lamb we all came down. The salad with roasted beets, toasted pecans and blue cheese was very pretty on the plate. I served the rest of the meal on a large platter with the wild rice in the center, surrounded by a ring of the roasted carrots and then the racks of lamb were sliced and placed around the outer edge of the platter. We sat it in the center of the table so the meal could be informal and additional lamb chops were easy to reach.
After the plates were cleared and water glasses refilled, I served the chocolate glazed peanut butter tart. I almost always try at least one new recipe for a dinner party and this was the new one for this party. It was very pretty. It tasted somewhat like a Reese's peanut butter cup. The recipe was from Fine Cooking Magazine and I thought it was "okay" but for me it isn't one of the keepers from that magazine.
It was almost 11 PM when our friends left. Needless to say the kitchen clean up waited until the next morning.
This picture was made just as we left the immigration place where you get car permits and visas. Getting there is an adventure. The street signs are now a "little" better but it is so counter to our normal sense of the rules of the road. You are on the right side of the highway going east and you need to turn all the way across the traffic coming west and then back in a U-turn to also go west on a road on the other side of the highway. The road that leads to the immigration offices parallels the highway and is two lanes although it isn't marked very well and you are surprised to see cars heading toward you. In this picture the Rio Grande is to our left and the four-lane highway is to the right. 
As we drove down the mountain and into San Miguel de Allende as always I was thrilled to see the town spread out across a little valley and up the sides of the mountain. And at this time of the year it is dotted with the most amazing purple color of the blooms of the Jacaranda tree. So beautiful. After we have settled in I'll make some pictures to post.
During FotoFest in Houston you kind of have a built in audience since the FotoFest Organization loads up buses of the gallery owners and curators who come to participate in the Meeting Place. Then there are photographers who are in town to also participate in the Meeting Place and enjoy the 120 something photography exhibitions around the city. Goldesberry Gallery is in a group of galleries on Colquitt that have art patrons who regularly attend their openings. Added to that many of my friends and neighbors also came to see my work. Now who wouldn't have a good time under those circumstances.
Max has a new bike, a gameboy and a remote controller for the playstation....remote has become necessary since Dexter became mobile.







Just one week ago this Mexican Sycamore didn't have a leaf on it. So far the crepe myrtles are leafless but once you see one leaf, they seem to turn green in just a couple of days. We don't rape and mutilated our crepe myrtles cutting off the branches to nubs so they spring to life very quickly.

It is nest building time. A pair of mockingbirds are building this nest just outside my kitchen window. Can you see the nest, tucked in just behind the left wing of this violin playing angel? Once they lay the eggs, I'm sure everytime we walk by the one standing guard will screech at us to distract our attention from their little family. But it will be fun to watch from the safety of the kitchen window.


