Monday, 14 February 2022

A 'Thing' About Birds

Back in art college, many years ago, I lino printed some textile with birds on it. I still have it. I have always had a 'thing' about birds, so it came as no surprise to Mister Handmade in Israel that this year's Valentine's card had a bird on it! I created a sweet and simple design, inspired by a small print I saw on Pinterest, showing a bird sitting on a branch. The branches are bare apart from a few leaves. I added a couple of hearts, which are "blooming" there instead. The card was cut from white stock with a red paper inlay.
Valentine's Day in Israel is not the same kind of celebration as it is in other places in the world, but Mister Handmade in Israel and I always mark the day in some way. We both grew up in the UK and enjoy keeping some British traditions. In Israel there is another day, called Tu B'Av, that celebrates love. The holiday takes place in the summer months, this year on the 11th August.
We exchanged Valentine's cards and Mister Handmade in Israel sent me these gorgeous flowers and a yummy package of English chocolates too! Our supplies were running low from our last trip to the UK. Mister Handmade in Israel received some locally made espresso coffee liqueur, which we both like. I hope he shares!
My Random Musings

Thursday, 10 February 2022

Skiing and Studying

A new customer wrote to me to tell me that her son's Bar Mitzvah was approaching at the end of January and she wanted to order a card. "They're beautiful!" she wrote to me. Her son's passion is skiing and if they weren't in Israel, her son was going to have his Bar Mitzvah celebration on the mountains in Colorado. She wanted to know if I could create a card that incorporated the Bar Mitzvah theme and tefillin, along with mountains and skiing.
Of course I could!
I showed the Bar Mitzvah boy wearing a green ski jacket and holding a pair of skis. He is also wearing tefillin. Tefillin (sometimes called phylacteries) are cubic black leather boxes with leather straps that Orthodox Jewish men wear on their head and their arm during weekday morning prayer. Jewish men start wearing tefillin just before their Bar Mitzvah.
Tefillin have two leather boxes, one of which is worn on the arm and the other of which is worn on the head. If you are right-handed, which this young man is, you should wear tefillin on the bicep of your left arm. The tefillin box worn on the head should be centred just above the forehead with the two leather straps wrapped around the head, then hanging down over the shoulders.
Behind the picture of this young man I cut out some snowy mountains and a ski lift. I added the number 13 to mark his age and the age that Jewish boys become Bar Mitzvah.
His mum wrote "The card was super cute!"
Eliya was turning 17. Her mum told me that she is a swimmer and is completing a Wingate* course to become an instructor. She was a madricha (youth leader) in the Scouts, or Tzofim as they are known in Hebrew, and is now a רשג״דית (ראש גדוד or senior counsellor) in charge of a whole age group. Finally, Eliya's mum told me that she is taking 5 units in Arabic, maths and physics at school. Israeli kids graduate from high school after taking exams available in different levels of difficulty, marked as units. 5 is the highest level. Eliya is obviously a smart young lady!
I have shown Eliya holding a pile of books. Each book shows the subject and number of units she is taking. To her right is a swimming costume, swim cap and goggles, along with the badge of the Academic College at Wingate. On her left I added her green and white striped tie, which shows her rank in the Israeli Scouts.
Mum told me that "She loved the card. It was perfect."
* The Wingate Institute, officially Orde Wingate Institute for Physical Education and Sports, is a sports training facility located south of Netanya, established in 1957. It is named after the senior British Army officer and supporter of Zionism, Orde Wingate. The facility serves as the host facility for numerous Israeli national teams.

** This post has been shared on Little Things Thursday, Thursday Favorite Things
PoCoLo
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Monday, 7 February 2022

The Eurasian Jay

One morning, not long ago, I looked out of the window and saw a beautiful Eurasian Jay hopping around our front garden. This particular bird is a frequent visitor to our garden and one that I always enjoy seeing. Even though I was still in my dressing gown, I grabbed my camera and, after just a handful of shots, managed to get a lovely one. The jay is sitting on our garden fence, framed beautifully by one of our flowering bushes which is currently offering some bright orange berries, below.
I posted the photo on my Facebook profile and it was popular! I decided that if my friends liked it so much, I was going to recreate the photo in paper. The piece I have made measures 20x25cm and, like much of my work, is created from layers of cut paper. The original is for sale and it is also available as print in my Etsy shop. Please send me an email or leave a comment if you are interested in purchasing the piece.
Now, a little bit about the Eurasian Jay. It is a relatively small corvid (a bird of the crow family), with a length of 34–35 cm and a wingspan of 52–58 cm. It has a stout black bill, a white throat with a thick black moustache. and the forehead and crown are white with black stripes. It has a black-and-white wing pattern with a prominent bright blue patch with fine black bars on the shoulder. The tail is mainly black.
The Eurasian Jay is an inhabitant of woodland, forest, parkland and gardens with larger trees, especially oaks. It feeds in both trees and on the ground, eating a wide range of invertebrates, acorns, seeds, berries and even young birds and eggs, bats and small rodents! It is typically rather shy and difficult to see well, but sometimes feeds out on open ground, as the one in our garden did. Pairs mate for life and work together to construct their messy-looking nests. Nests are built in trees and shrubs using twigs, with roots and hair for lining, where the female will lay four to five eggs.
The Eurasian jay is a common resident of Israeli towns and villages that have parks and green spaces, particularly in the north and central Israel.
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs

Monday, 31 January 2022

Nineteen

Remember last year, when my youngest son turned 18 and celebrated the day at home with his mum and dad because we were in lockdown? Well, this year he turned 19 and spent the day - and the rest of the week - in the company of the Israel Defence Forces (IDF), where he is currently doing his compulsory service. He came home at the weekend though and we were able to spoil him a little bit then.
My youngest son enlisted back in August and is now a tank driver. The army is pretty much his life for the moment. I wanted to make his birthday card different to his Giyus Kal ("Have an easy call-up") card. This time I showed him with short hair. The army requires him to keep his curls short and even length, without layering. He is holding his rifle and there is a tank behind him. I also included the club badge of our local football team, Ironi Modi'in F.C. Even though he is somewhat preoccupied these days, my son still manages to keep an eye on what they are doing and even managed to get to a game recently. Finally, I showed my son against a stunning orange sunset. He's got a good eye for photography and has sent us a few great shots of tanks in the desert since his service began.
My son loved his card and squirrelled it off to his room to place it on the shelf next to his Giyus Kal card. He did point out, in the nicest way possible, that I had given him an M4 rifle whilst he actually has an M16. Now, I am completely out of my comfort zone when it comes to guns! I know nothing about them. In order to make the birthday card as accurate as possible, I whatsapped Mister Handmade in Israel to check which gun our son has. I blame him!
I now know that the M16 has a different length barrel to an M4 and the carrying handle is a different shape too. Will I remember this for another time? Probably not. I was rather proud of my efforts anyway!
My next mistake was with the tank. Apparently I cut out an artillery tank and not the type of tank my son drives. My tank was actually a great improvement on the one I had put on his Giyus Kal card but, once again I was educated on things I have no desire to know more about. An artillery tank has light armour and a bigger gun in a turret to fire at far away targets. Tanks have heavy armour and a shorter gun in a turret to fight other tanks.
My son loved his card anyway and the sherry cake, made by Mister Handmade in Israel, which is his favourite...
Sticky Mud and Belly Laughs
My Random Musings
JENerally Informed

Thursday, 27 January 2022

Mrar Hills National Park

The Mrar Hills are situated in the Shfela (Judaean foothills), south of the city of Rehovot and north of Gedera. The hills are the fourth and last ridge among the kurkar (calcareous sandstone) ridges on the southern coastal plain. Open kurkar areas in Israel are in decline and their rich world of flora and fauna, some of which are unique to them, are disappearing. Part of the kurkar ridge in the southern part of the Mrar Hills has been declared a national park and is maintained by the Nature and Parks Authority. 
The Mrar hills rise 94 meters above sea level. In the Book of Joshua they are defined as a mountain, "Mount Baalah", on the border of the lands of Dan and Judah. Potsherds from the Chalcolithic period and burial caves from the Middle Bronze Age and the Roman and Byzantine periods, above, have been found in the hills, showing that people have lived in Mrar for many generations. 
Some of the caves may have been turned into dwellings or storerooms during the Ottoman period, when there was a Muslim cave village here. The name Mrar ("caves" in Arabic) shows us the importance of caves to the village.
At the end of the Ottoman period - and to this day - orchards were planted in the fertile soil that collected in the valleys between the kurkar ridges. The inhabitants of Mrar Hills had a few water sources, the most important and dependable of which was the Sorek Stream, which flows from the south. During the Ottoman period the village had a well and a cistern. The village also had a controlling view of its surroundings, which gave it a strategic advantage, an important element in pre-modern times for the development of a settlement. On the west was the ancient international road connecting Egypt and Syria (the "Via Maris" or "Way of the Sea"). Another road linked the settlements that developed to the east. In certain periods an east-west road passed south of the village, connecting the coastal plain with the Judaean lowlands and the Jerusalem Mountains.
At the top of the hill are water storage pools built by the Mekorot company as part of the Yarkon-Negev water line that was established between 1952 and 1955, before construction of the National Water Carrier. Their purpose was to channel water from the Yarkon Springs to agricultural communities in the northern Negev.
A statue of a horseman stands nearby as a reminder of the many battles that have taken place in these hills, before the establishment of the State of Israel. On 13th November 1917, as part of the battles of the First World War in Israel, the Battle of the Mrar Hills took place on the ridge. British forces launched a combined assault, when English cavalry (Yeomanry) and Scottish infantry fought against 3,000 Ottoman troops and defeated them. The British forces on their way to Ramle encountered the Ottoman forces occupying positions in the ridge and nearby villages. At the end of the battle, the British took control of the main railway junction, with railway lines leading to the south of Israel, and opened the way to the Jerusalem-Jaffa road. The retreating Ottoman forces lost hundreds of troops and about a thousand were captured by the British. The British lost about 500 soldiers.
The Yeomanry charge at these hills, known as El Mughar Ridge, is considered one of the last cavalry charges in military history.
The agave shrub can be found in several locations on the hills, above. Agave grows for about 10 years before it blooms, which it only does once in its lifetime. Before the agave blooms, it produces a long, thick trunk from which a cluster of thousands of fragrant yellow flowers emerges, which are pollinated by birds. Arabs customarily plant the agave in cemeteries. Agave was once grown in Israel to produce fibre and medication, but today it is used for ornamental purposes only. Other species of agave elsewhere in the world are cultivated to make sugar and tequila.
On the southeastern fringe of the ridge lay an Arab village called Al-Ma'ar ("The caves"), from which the name of the hills full of kurkar caves was derived. With the construction of RAF Aqir, which served as the main Royal Air Force station in Palestine during the Second World War, the importance of the village increased. At the beginning of the War of Independence, in May 1948, the village was captured by the IDF. After the war, the newly named Tel Nof Airbase became a central base for training the Paratroopers Brigade. A monument to the fallen paratroopers in Israel's wars, which we saw at the start of our visit, is located at Tel Nof, near a site that was once a major paratroopers base.
In 2020, the The Mrar Hills National Park was upgraded. Stairs were built, paths were paved and signs were set up explaining the landscape, the vegetation and the battle of the cavalry that took place there. The metal horseman found his place high up on the ridge.
From the top of the hill there is a spectacular view of the surrounding settlements: to the southwest you can see Gedera, to the southeast is Moshav Beit Elazari, established in 1948 by Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe. You can also see the runway and hangars of the Tel Nof Air Force Base.
Before returning to our car parked at the paratroopers monument, we stopped for a rest on the grass in front of the monument, above. The towering pillar of the monument, with parachute wings, is carved with the words of the poet and Special Operations Executive, Hannah Szenes, "A voice called to me - and I went, I went because the voice called." The monument's long stone wall is inscribed with the biblical verse: "They were swifter than eagles, they were stronger than lions." (2 Samuel 1:23). On the wall the names of the paratroopers who fell from 1949 onward. The monument was built at the initiative of the paratroopers force and the bereaved families. It was unveiled on 29th October 1960.

PoCoLo