Sunday, 28 April 2024

Elinor and Galia

Elinor's mum asked me to make a special card for her daughter's upcoming 18th birthday. She plays the violin and is a competitive swimmer, so a violin and swimming cap and goggles were requested. Elinor also likes to bake, so mum asked me to include a chocolate cake with decorations. Finally, I was told that she drives a grey seven-seater Mazda 5. I had to look that one up!
Mum was delighted with the card. "You did an outstanding job!" she wrote to me. "Elinor loved the card!"
Galia started her medical studies several months ago. Back then, her mum asked me to create a card somehow featuring the Tel Aviv University Faculty of Medicine. I went one step further and showed Galia wearing a blue medics overall and hung a stethoscope around her neck. Behind her is the Tel Aviv University Faculty of Medicine logo, along with a small pile of medical books, a bottle of pills and a syringe.
"Galia's card is just brilliant" mum wrote to me, then followed that up by telling me that Galia too loved the card.

* This post has been shared on Busy Monday Wordless Wednesday (on Tuesday)
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs
My Random Musings

Sunday, 21 April 2024

International Birding and Research Centre Eilat

This post was written a year last December, when we took a short break in Eilat, Israel's southernmost city. With everything going on here in Israel at the moment, we currently have no plans to travel anywhere, but hope that one day soon we will be able to go out and discover new and interesting places in our beautiful country.
Israel's Arava region, the desert valley that extends from the Dead Sea to Eilat, is an important bird migration route between Europe and Africa. Millions of birds pass through the region during the migration seasons. En route many of them stop over in Eilat. In the autumn, on their way to Africa, the birds pause to rest and regain their strength before crossing the foodless and hostile Saharan desert that lies before them; and in spring, on their journey to Europe, they stop to recuperate after their desert adventures. The International Birding and Research Centre Eilat (IBRCE), located at the northern entrance to the city, is the perfect place to observe all these birds.
The IBRCE lies on what was once a salt marsh, before it was turned into an industrial waste site. The area around Eilat was once home to extensive salt marshes where plants provided flowers and fruits to feed the migrating birds. But as the resort city expanded, the salt marshes were replaced by urban sprawl. During the 1970s and '80s developers built shopping malls, hotels, housing and restaurants that used the salt marshes of Eilat as a landfill for all their rubbish. Residents strolling through the city streets would find hundreds of dead birds at their feet. The poor creatures had searched in vain for their natural habitat, trying to find the indigenous plants and the salt marshes that had fed them so wonderfully in the past.
Something had to be done.
In 1993 the ground was leveled, the rubbish dumps were covered up, pools were created and trees that could provide the birds with food were planted. The park is now run by the KKL-JNF (Jewish National Fund), together with the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel, the Nature and Parks Authority, Eilat Municipality and Ben Gurion University, all of whom oversaw the transformation of the rubbish dump into an environmentally friendly venue and bird watching park.
Now the migratory birds can enjoy resting in a tranquil spot that extends over about one tenth of the original area of the salt marsh and which is well provided with food. Israel's national water company Mekorot has also become involved in the project and it supplies water for the lake in the park, which has become a wonderful habitat for a variety of aquatic species. 
The park includes a number of paths flanked by hides that enable visitors to observe the birds without disturbing them. Ponds offer different water conditions and quantities of light and shade. A salt marsh has been recreated to serve warblers, rare species of sparrows and shrikes, while a freshwater lake thickly lined with foliage attracts waterfowl, herons, kingfishers and waders. Salt pans are populated by flamingos and gulls, and reed beds by crakes and reed warblers. The Asian Green Bee-eater is a common visitor. All in all, more than 480 species of birds have been recorded in the Eilat area. Foxes, shrews, hyenas and snakes are all regular visitors too, but you have to go there really late at night or way before dawn to see them.
The IBRCE is also involved in nature conservation work and campaigns throughout the Southern Arava region, making sure the desert skies are clear from hazards and the stop-over sites are safe and welcoming for the birds. Centre staff visit local kibbutzim to explain the importance of birds and encourage them to become more bird-friendly. They also conduct research and monitor migrant birds. During the spring and autumn it is possible to watch bird ringing and see many incredible species up close and in the hand. About 25,000 birds are caught each year in Eilat for monitoring purposes. Using a special ring placed on the bird's leg, they track their migration patterns.
The IBRCE also has a small hospital designed to give immediate care to birds that arrive too exhausted and hungry and need to be injected with fluids and fed manually. Birds that arrive wounded are flown to the safari in Ramat-Gan for treatment.
The park staff organize a variety of activities for the general public and provide guided tours for groups and individuals. Guiding takes place in the mornings but a visit at any time of the year is recommended. I couldn't help but think how much Gadi, a bird-lover, would have enjoyed it.

Tomorrow night the festival of Pesach or Passover, the Jewish Festival of Freedom, begins. It is celebrated to mark the Exodus of the Jews from Egypt. This year it will be less of a celebration and more a marking of the holiday. 133 Israeli hostages are still being held in Gaza and are not free to sit around the Seder table with their loved ones. Celebrating the Festival of Freedom frankly feels impossible.

Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Monday, 15 April 2024

Daniel, Ro'i and Missiles in the Sky

On Saturday night Iran shot roughly 300 ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and suicide drones from its territory into Israel. This marked the first-ever direct attack on Israel by the Islamic Republic, triggering air raid sirens throughout the country. We had a sleepless night listening to the fighter jets overhead and wondering what was going to happen to us. It's been a rather anxious few days. But I want to continue sharing my art here, in an attempt to normalize my life. I hope you enjoy two of my latest cards.
The last birthday card I made for Daniel showed him playing the piano. His mum said that he still plays all the time, so it should be the main theme of this year's card too. It was up to me to come up with something different!
Daniel's mum sent me a photo of him at the piano. She said that the beige sweatshirt he is wearing is his current favourite (last time it was blue!). She also asked me to add his soccer (football) boots, some car keys (to show that he drives) and a big 18.
I showed Daniel sitting at the piano, making music. Some car keys, with a little white car on the keyring, are next to him, and his black soccer boots, with the pattern on them accurately copied, are in the foreground. A big orange number 18 marks his age.
Mum wrote to tell me that "[The card] was a wonderful success. He loved it and really thinks it looks like him!".
Daniel's older brother, Ro'i, turned 23. Mum wanted me to show him with his grey rucksack and sent me a photo of him on his travels. Now back in Israel, he has gone back to rehearsing monologues for theatre class, she told me, so asked me to add a notebook or paper with the word 'monologue' on it. Finally, Ro'i's girlfriend is called Maya, so I added a red heart with her name in it.
A big blue number 23 marks Roi's age.
* This post has been shared on The Good. The Random. The Fun.
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Monday, 8 April 2024

Yair's Album

Yair was due to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah on 12th October 2023. On the morning of 7th October, in an act of war, hundreds of Hamas terrorists invaded Israel while firing thousands of rockets. Yair's Bar Mitzvah plans were derailed. His mum had already collected the album I had made for his celebration, and I do know that he was able to go ahead and use it anyway, just a few months later! I made a Bar Mitzvah album for Yair's brother, Gavriel, back in 2021. Back then we were still in the throes of Covid-19, so Gavriel's Bar Mitzvah celebration must have been a bit different from the norm too.
Yair is interested in space and the galaxies. He enjoys reading books like Percy Jackson and Harry Potter, and his favourite food is sushi. The family was planning to hold his Bar Mitzvah outdoors, so mum asked me to feature nature on the cover of Yair's album and to use green and burnt orange colours.
I have shown Yair with a book in one hand and some chopsticks in the other. Behind him are some planets and stars, to reflect his interest in space. On the right is the logo for his Bar Mitzvah and at the bottom some more sushi and two of Yair's favourite books. I added some leaves as well, to cover the nature theme.
Yair's Bar Mitzvah and the date appears at the top in English and at the bottom in HebrewThe lettering is in gold.
I decorated five pages inside the album as well. The opening page featured some planets and stars. Next I showed two of Yair's favourite books, "Percy Jackson: The Lightning Thief" and "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone". A page was devoted to Yair's taste for sushi, below, and I added the logo of his Bar Mitzvah invitation to another page too. Finally, I created a little outdoor scene, imaging where Yair's Bar Mitzvah was due to take place.
"Your books are always such a special addition to our smachot [joyous occasions]. Thank you so, so much." Yair's mum wrote to me.
She also wrote this piece about the war and her son's Bar Mitzvah and shared it on Facebook. I am sharing it here with her permission.
Today we should be feeling happy.
Today we should be dressing up and putting on our new beautiful clothes.
Today we should be excited and over the moon.
Today we should be smiling with pride and crying happy tears.
Today we should be celebrating our son's Bar Mitzvah.
But
Today we are home.
Today we are crying.
Today we are mourning.
Today we are scared and worried for our safety and the safety of our country.
Today we are worried and praying for every single one of our soldiers, our people on the frontlines, for every single one of our people.
Today we are begging and praying for the hostages to be returned.
Today we are praying for this nightmare to be over.
Today is a different Today than it should be.
- Taryn I Baker
* This post has been shared on The Good. The Random. The Fun. and Inspire Me Tuesday.

Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs