Wednesday, December 31, 2008

End 2008 with a Bang

On the last days of the year 2008, Miami is full of blooms. I think that the brief two or three quick but timely and "just right" cold fronts did a lot of good to entice the trees to produce. My Purple Wreath vine (Petrea volubilis) is going crazy and blooms as if there is no tomorrow. All the mango trees around are full of flowers. Stay indoor if you are allergic to pollen! The purple wreath is a tropical perennial vine and climber. But mine grows quite hefty and its trunk is as large as that of a juvenile tree. It blooms spectacularly several times a year. Today it seems to be at its peak. In the background is the Keitt mango tree fully covered with blooms. 'Keitt' is a Florida mango that has become one of the world’s most renown. It produces excellent eating quality, disease resistance, four to five pound goliath fruits. While the fruits are extremely disease resistant, the juvenile trees are very difficult to grow due to disease problems. The flowers begin now so the the fruits can ripen from August to October. I can't wait that long for these mangoes.

Blooms

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

It's Over

Christmas is over. This local hardware store, Ace, is selling its Xmas merchandise at 50% off. Some people do their next year's Xmas shopping at this time. That's planning! I can't plan further than 1 day so that's not for me.

Sale

Monday, December 29, 2008

Automaton

The price of progress is seen here in the trash collection service of Miami. Last June, my blog showed a typical trash collection operation. The truck was manned by a driver plus two or three men who handled the trash containers. It was then. This is now. The trash container is now standardized and collection is done by a single person driving the truck with automaton arms. For each truck, I see two or three job losses.

Robotic Arms

Sunday, December 28, 2008

CheeseBurgers, CheeseBurgers

Models of cholesterol laden burgers in display.

CheeseBurgers

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Empty Office Buildings

The economy stinks, to say the least! This office building is almost empty and this is moving day again. You'd think it's easy to move furniture, but I watched these strong fellows moving this desk. It's back breaking work. Many buildings now stand empty and their owners must have a hard time collecting rents! But I feel more for the small business owners all of whom are hurting bad these days.

Moving Out

Friday, December 26, 2008

Xmas Bromeliad

The plant genus Tillandsia, named by Carolus Linnaeus after the Finnish physician and botanist Dr. Elias Tillandz (originally Tillander) (1640-1693), is a member of the Bromeliad family (Bromeliaceae.) It is a very small plant and I would call it a miniature bromeliad. This plant is found in the deserts, forests and mountains of Central and South America, and Mexico and the southern United States in North America. The thinner leafed varieties grow in rainy areas and the thick leafed varieties in areas more subject to drought. Moisture and nutrients are gathered from the air through structures on the leaves called trichomes. Tillandsia species are epiphytes. In nature they normally grow without soil, attached to other plants. Epiphytes are not parasitic, and depend on the host only for support. Common names for Tillandsia include air plant, ball moss (T. recurvata) and Spanish moss (T. usneoides.) There are about 650 species of Tillandsia, and this is my Tillandsia tenuifolia. It was started years ago with a handful of pups. It has now self propagated into at least a dozen clusters around this longan tree. They flower every year at this time and last until late February. It should have been named Xmas Bromeliad.

Miniature Bromeliad

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Xmas Bananas

Xmas day is usually quiet and sad for some lonesome soul. The streets of Miami are almost empty. It can be a day of rest for many, like me, exhausted running around after material superfluous things. This day is a welcome cure of silence. These banana hands may be ready in a week or so. Do you see some whole leaves? Make a wish!

Banana

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Cutler Bay

This is a retirement community in the deep south of Miami, a place called Cutler Bay, all the way to about SW 190th street and 87th Avenue. Miami is a BIG city. This is an unpretentious community and very quiet, with lots of security. The peacocks seem to enjoy the serene life style here. I was going to the 800 block so I was happy to see the signs. I found it! Finally!

Peacocks

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Skybanner Ad

This is what I saw at the Miami's Dadeland Mall today (yes, I am still suffering through this:) A Simon's SkyBanner Network high-tech ad. I must admit that this got my full attention because it is a nice high-tech toy that grabs at you. It looks like a 42 or 52 inch flat screen hung high above at the center of the most heavily used traffic lane in this shopping mall. The photo of Donald Trump and his ad is seen on both sides. If you do not know who he is, look him up. He is very famous for his toupee. Obviously, Donald Trump is into high-tech and he found this way to get his ad directly to the Simon Mall Consumers. I found that Simon Property Group, Inc. is an S&P 500 company and the largest public U.S. real estate company. That is obviously the connection to Donald Trump because he is in real estate in a big way. This ad is very nice, and I like this high-tech delivery.

However, would you buy your dress shirts and neckwear from this guy? Not me! You are fired!

The Trump Ad

Monday, December 22, 2008

Santa's Lair

Santa is doing a brisk business today even when it's a Monday in Dadeland Mall. I procrastinated but had to bite the bullet to face the crowd today in the malls, quickly running out of time before Xmas. I hate this. But the kids line up with their parents to take a photo with Santa in his lair. Frankly, it's getting harder for me to take photos in public places nowadays and I can tell that my photos do suffer. I just cannot take time to compose my shots. Instead, I just sneak and shoot before I get caught by some low IQ guards and get yelled at. But Santa's in this photo, if you care to look for him. Of course, you can't see the kids! I hate this!

Dadeland Mall

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Betty's Best

This is inside Betty's Best Burgers. As it was discussed on the net, they are back to Coca Cola and discontinued Pepsi Cola. I can't tell the difference. Can you? Their hamburgers are a bit better, but not as good as Fuddruckers. What's the secret? I wish I knew!

Inside Betty's Best

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Xmas Cactus

Christmas Cactus (Schlumbergera bridgesi) is a favorite holiday season house plant, but one which needs careful attention to details if it is to live and flower again the next year. However, I found that mine never fail, they bloom around Christmas time, like a clockwork without any other care than to water them once in a blue moon. This plant is closely related to Easter Cactus (Schlumbergera gaertneri) and Thanksgiving Cactus (Schlumbergera truncatus), all with fleshy, flattened, segmented joints and showy flowers ranging in color from white through pink, red and purple. These are cacti which in nature live in the crotches of jungle trees, and benefit from light, porous soil mixed with leaf mold and sand.

Xmas Cactus

Friday, December 19, 2008

Santa Time

This is the last day of school for many educational institutions in Miami. Schools will reopen again in early January 2009. It's festivity time and Santa begins making his rounds. Here he is taking time to pose with this little girl. Because I did not ask permission from her parents, her face is protected (as it is required by law) by a mask. Do you recognize the famous and mystic smile on her protective mask?

Santa Break

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Badaboom

Another accident in the middle of the day, in clear weather and wide, dry beautifully maintained roads. Miamians are truly the worst drivers I know! The car that needs attention is hidden by the police car. It apparently needs help from the green emergency truck that was dispatched. The other car is WAY to the left, outside of my camera view. I don't know the economy of this, but I think someone will receive a bill from the emergency rescue department. It's certainly not free.

Crack, Boom

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Roots

Malanga is probably the most hypoallergenic food in the world, so even persons with extensive allergies should not have problems with the flour manufactured from this vegetable. The starch grains are the smallest and most easily digested of all complex carbohydrates. Malanga is closely related to the taro root, which is used to make poi, a cooked paste, common in Polynesian countries. Malanga and taro root are in the Arum family, Araceae. Malanga is also called yautia, cocoyam, eddo, coco, tannia, sato-imo, and Japanese potatoes. The various species of malanga or yautia, include some of the oldest root crops in the world. It was first cultivated in tropical America, and spread to Africa in the mid 1800s, and is also grown in the Philippines. They are especially popular in Cuba (malanga) and Puerto Rico (yautia) and are found in this Winn Dixie supermarket that caters well to the large Hispanic population in Miami.

Malanga are about the size and shape of a regular white potato; they look a little like an overgrown gladiola bulb, because the outside skin of the malanga is dark brown and somewhat hairy. There are about 1530 calories in one pound of malanga flour. The composition of malanga flour is approximately: 75.5% carbohydrates, 5.1% protein, 1.6% fat, 9.8% fiber, 1.2% water, and 6.8% minerals. In this photo, they are to the right of the green chayote squash, and also at the other end of the container.

Malanga

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

No longer Fuddruckers

This fast food restaurant on US-1 finally got a name. It's at 78 Ave and 104 Street, SW Miami and used to be my most favorite burger joint: Fuddruckers. I sorely miss it when the ownership changed to become Amos Sports Grill, which was so much inferior I tried twice and never returned. I think Amos was a failure and never even got its name on the sign. Now it's called Betty's Best Burgers. The sign is not easily seen from US-1 and I was not about to get into a car accident to get a better shot. Trust me, it says "Betty's Best Burgers." A review says its hamburger is the same as Fuddruckers so I need to try it soon. I hope so.

Betty's Best

Monday, December 15, 2008

Dwarfed Tamarind

Of all the fruit trees of the tropics, none is more widely distributed nor more appreciated as an ornamental than the tamarind, Tamarindus indica L. (syns. T. occidentalis Gaertn.; T. officinalis Hook.), of the family Leguminosae.

The tamarind, a slow-growing, long-lived, massive tree reaches, under favorable conditions, a height of 80 or even 100 ft (24-30 m), and may attain a spread of 40 ft (12 m) and a trunk circumference of 25 ft (7.5 m). It is highly wind-resistant, with strong, supple branches, gracefully drooping at the ends, and has dark-gray, rough, fissured bark. The mass of bright-green, fine, feathery foliage is composed of pinnate leaves, 3 to 6 in (7.5-15 cm) in length, each having 10 to 20 pairs of oblong leaflets 1/2 to 1 in (1.25-2.5 cm) long and 1/5 to 1/4 in (5-6 mm) wide, which fold at night.

This is mine, but it is contained in a large pot which really is having a tough time to prevent it to grow vigorously. It may, or may not be tranplanted because it will grow too large to overwhelm all the other trees.

Me

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Face Lift

Sunset Drive, which is Miami's "Historic Road" and is East-West SW 72nd Street, receives continuous enhancement of landscaping as described in my previous blog This face lift was just completed a few weeks ago. The big clock and palm trees on the South side of the street are brand new additions. The elevated metro rail is seen in the distance where it parallels US-1. I wonder when this clock will die, because all these clocks eventually do. I am optimistic, but not too overly.

Sunset Drive

Saturday, December 13, 2008

GranTurismo

Didn't I tell you there is a lot of money in the streets of Miami? Here is another of these babies: A 2008 Maserati GranTurismo Coupe, suggested price of US $110,000. Of course, again, you've got to add more green backs to drive it off the show room. This car is designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro of ItalDesign, as Italian as Italian can be. It is a gas guzzler but I guess money is of no concern for these owners. This street is in South Miami where trendy restaurants abound, and muscle cars are parked pele-mele, especially on TGIF (Thank God it's Friday) and weekends.

Maserati, with a Trident

Friday, December 12, 2008

Fearless!

This man has no fear to pose for my photo. That gives me more faith to the homosapien spirit, and his cause got a free internet advertising. Yeah! This location is just a stone throw from that of my close encounter of the paranoia kind on Tuesday. This man is fearless, and I am fearless!

No Fear