Thursday, August 31, 2017
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Tuesday, August 29, 2017
Monday, August 28, 2017
Sunday, August 27, 2017
Goa of the 1960's,
The Multilingual Myna
Saturday, August 26, 2017
Friday, August 25, 2017
'Gurguretesque' Line Art Drawing
'Gurguretesque'
(Line Art by Tony Fernandes)
Gurguret ~ (Water Dispenser made of clay)
It is a very popular item that is sold in the dedicated clay market area in major towns and cities in Goa. Its main feature is the spout which is reminiscent of the famous head of the Portuguese Barcelos rooster or Galo de Barcelos.
It the old days many folks in Goa covered long distances walking from place to place. During the summer months is was not uncommon to see this type of coolers along with a cup or glass outside the houses located on the roadside so that people could quench their thirst. This may be unbelievable, but I have walked with my mother and my aunt nine times from Guirim to Tivim for Novenas to Our Lady of Perpetual Succour in the early 1960's, and I have quenched my thirst from such water-coolers along the way.
Wednesday, August 23, 2017
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
Monday, August 21, 2017
Solar Eclipse
A day of reckoning - what would we do without the Sun.
A time to reflect on the power of the Creator.
Jet trails in the Sun.
Magnificent heavenly display - when the sun and the moon play hide & seek, and it was the Sun's turn today to assume the shape of a crescent
Magnificent heavenly display - when the sun and the moon play hide & seek, and it was the Sun's turn today to assume the shape of a crescent
Solar Eclipse - 21 August 2017 - Mississauga, Canada.
Camera: Canon ~ Shot with green filter.
Time: 14:12:59, Mode: Manual, ISO 80, Exp. f5.6, @1/1600 sec.
~ © Photo by Tony Fernandes.
Direction: 211° Altitude: 54.7°
Camera: Canon ~ Shot with green filter.
Time: 14:12:59, Mode: Manual, ISO 80, Exp. f5.6, @1/1600 sec.
~ © Photo by Tony Fernandes.
Direction: 211° Altitude: 54.7°
Sunday, August 20, 2017
Goan 'Confro' - the Sanna Maker
A Page from my book 'A Line in Time'
My book "A LINE IN TIME" ISBN 978-0-9735515-1-8 is a collection of line drawings that are reflections of all things Goan, scenes of the U.A.E., as well as landscapes of Canada. The booklet contains 136 pages of illustrations and descriptions of drawings that were sketched over my lifetime. This book can be ordered on-line through www.ednaspickles.com
Goan 'Confro'
The Sanna Maker
A traditional rice-cake steamer - a clever invention of our ancestors. Made from copper and hammer-finished by Goan coppersmiths with a tight-fitting lid, two handles on the main pot and handle for the lid. Available in shops in all major towns. The indent around the middle of the lower half holds a tin shelf with holes that let the steam from the water in the reservoir to pass through and steam cook several rice cakes all at once that are placed in small tin saucers on the tray.
Saturday, August 19, 2017
Friday, August 18, 2017
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Goan Balcao (Balcony)
A place for everyone and everything
One of the prime features of a Goan house is a Balcão (Portuguese) or balcony. In the summer months one could spend more time in the balcão than inside the house. Balcões (plural in Port.) are constructed in different shapes and sizes. Some have stone/red cement benches with reclining rests to rest on, while others have wooden benches. It is a place for everyone, everything and every occasion - a place for serious or idle conversation, for local gossip, a place to rest after a long journey before entering the house, to enjoy afternoon tea, for a thirsty stranger asking for a glass of water, for the spill-over of late comers at a sung litany or for a impromptu singing session of the Goan mando (folk songs). In the old days of the 1960's we brought the portable transistor out and placed it on the cement bench, and neighbours came over to listen to the popular evening English request program broadcast by Radio Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and All India Radio Goa.
When we were young, sometimes on rainy days of the monsoon season, the village boys and girls could not play outdoors after school in the evenings. So, we played carrom, draughts, games of cards, ludo, and at times, one of village elders would relate stories in the balcony of his house about his good old days. To hear him relate old stories was a pleassure. He regaled us with colourful accounts of his younger days and other short stories of wit and humour. It was getting dark as he still went on. It was dusk, and as we heard the chimes of the Angelus bell of our village chapel, we would all rise as he recited the Angelus prayer at the end of which everyone wished him 'Boa Noite' (Good Night) before we walked to our individual homes.
When we were young, sometimes on rainy days of the monsoon season, the village boys and girls could not play outdoors after school in the evenings. So, we played carrom, draughts, games of cards, ludo, and at times, one of village elders would relate stories in the balcony of his house about his good old days. To hear him relate old stories was a pleassure. He regaled us with colourful accounts of his younger days and other short stories of wit and humour. It was getting dark as he still went on. It was dusk, and as we heard the chimes of the Angelus bell of our village chapel, we would all rise as he recited the Angelus prayer at the end of which everyone wished him 'Boa Noite' (Good Night) before we walked to our individual homes.
Wednesday, August 16, 2017
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Monday, August 14, 2017
Sunday, August 13, 2017
Time & Tide
TIME & TIDE
My body is like an hour-glass,
From it like sand my life will pass,
It will surely be over all too soon,
Just like the tide,
My life will then be a thing of the past.
When the sands of Time that now in my body
Steadily but slowly flow,
And all of it when it has ebbed away just like the Tide,
And there’s sand no more,
My life will then be a thing of the past for sure.
So then I take some Time now and then,
To write a thought into a word or two;
And entwine words into strings of verse,
In a day, week and sometimes perhaps
In a year or two.
So if we make the most of Time,
And sway not with the Tide;
In doing worthy and good things in life,
Will certainly be good
While we are still alive.
Good words heard or spoken,
Fall on deaf ears so very often,
But human good deeds and values,
In the end, and in Time,
Will not be outdone.
Through the hour-glass
Only goodness shall pass;
Not riches or gains,
Prosperity or wealth.
Status or class.
Sand depletes by the hour,
And the tide turns from high to low,
Our life is quickly running out,
And soon there will be nothing left,
When no more grains remain to flow.
Saturday, August 12, 2017
Friday, August 11, 2017
Thursday, August 10, 2017
Goan Rocking Chair
Rocking chairs are quite common in most family homes in Goa with their own unique designs and construction by Goan carpenters with their usual 2 curved pieces attached to the bottom of the legs. They are made to rock and do not have extendable pieces to rest one's legs like the Goan 'volter', which has 4 legs firmly on the ground with arm rest extensions that swing out to serve as leg rests. The original Voltaire chair was not a rocking chair and did not have extendable rests.
Tuesday, August 08, 2017
Country Singer of My Youth
Country Singer of My Youth
GLEN CAMPBELL
Rest in eternal peace;
Rhinestone Cowboy.
Your songs have brought happiness
and joy for most of my life.
Your songs, voice and music
indeed made this world a better place.
Your songs, voice and music
indeed made this world a better place.
Monday, August 07, 2017
The Goan Volter
~ The Goan Volter ~
Line Art/Crosshatch Drawing
by Tony Fernandes.
Saturday, August 05, 2017
Friday, August 04, 2017
Thursday, August 03, 2017
Goan Coconut Scraper & Fish Scaler, Aadoli, Aada'o
Traditional Goan Coconut Grater & Fish Scaler
This ancient invention is a prime multi-function kitchen tool made by local craftsmen and is used in every Goan household. The curved metal blade, which is used for scaling and cutting fish, splitting shells and cutting several types of vegetables, ends in a sharp toothed flat semi-circular toothed extension that is used to scrape/grate coconut used in cooking curries or making sweets. The device is pivoted to a wooden stool with metal angles that enables it to collapse over for safety when not in use. In its use, this gadget is firmly held in place on the floor by folks sitting astride this gadget when carrying out a cutting or scraping chore.