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Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Phoebe Sinclair Writes

Tag Archives: jamaica-plain

KidsArts Homemade Arcade

13 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Community

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

community, events, jamaica-plain, kids

This winter, I got a little taste of summer, Jersey-style. That is: a crowded room of shouting and running young’uns, calmly strolling middles, and smiling, photo-snapping oldies; the beeping-bloop sounds of electronic toys; and the sweet smell of sugar whipped into a pink, puffy cloud.

Sadly (and thankfully), the Homemade Arcade, created by the talented young-uns and staff of KidsArts! Multicultural Afterschool and Summer Program, did not offer cotton candy. What it lacked in kill-you-quick sugar, though, it more than made up for in creative, homegrown fun.

Phoebe at Homemade Arcade

What to do on a snowy winter’s afternoon? Walk on over to KidsArts for . . .

. . . some Whacky Watermelon Minigolf.

Watermelon mini golf

Navigating a field of strawberries . . .

Strawberry minefield

and avocado pits . . .

Avacado traps

and a tricky pineapple-windmill.

Windmill pineapple

Play some . . .

Skee-ball

Skee-ball 3

Toss a tiny basketball.

David plays tiny basketball

Dance, dance, the revolution.

DDR

Play Pac-Man . . .

Pac Man

. . . pinball . . .

Ben sets up pinball

And foosball!

Foosball

This arcade really hit all the boardwalk standards, and with none of the wood splinters, dank carpet-smell, or dropped hotdogs. I’d say that’s a win.

Bare Branches at Jamaica Pond

01 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Green Life

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

jamaica-plain, trees, winter

Caught on camera this winter . . .

Pond in winter

Willows

Feather caught in tree

. . . though I’m not sure it’s fair to refer to these branches -so full of color, shape, and intrigue– as “bare.”

What the Cat Gets Up To When We’re Not Home

27 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Home

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cat-love, jamaica-plain, this-moment

When I leave the apartment most mornings, the usually last sight I see of Jack (orange puffball who lives with us and commands food and “pets” daily) is him sitting quietly in the living room. I wonder what he gets up to during the day when we’re not around.

What the cat gets up to

My first guess is sleep, though sometimes I discover otherwise.

A Job For Digi Clover San

20 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Home, Jersey Moments

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

jamaica-plain, jersey, photography

Like most well-trained kids-of-consumer-culture, I spent a fair amount of time wishing for items I don’t own. And many more moments attempting to correct, or redirect, this behavior. Recently, my obsession has centered around digital cameras, and my lack of a good pocket-size model.

Enter Digi Clover San.

No, it’s not a “good” camera. Better description: toy. And, yet, there are many occasions for which Mr. Clover is up to the task.

Neon Buddah sign

Sun toy

Around JP and Jersey this weekend, I declared: This Looks Like A Job For Digi Clover San!

In progress

Weezie

What Is It: Door Knob Bulletin Board

13 Wednesday Feb 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in What Is It

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cambridge, jamaica-plain

As seen on the Sedgwick St. in Jamaica Plain:

Doorknob

Bulletin on Sedgwick St

Bulletin board with an attached . . . doorknob?

Whole Heart . . . Blizzard?

11 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Home

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

arnold-arboretum, as-we-are-living-it, food-n-cookin, hikes, jamaica-plain, winter

A blizzard will most certainly reset a person’s weekend plans.

Instead of crawfish at a friend’s Mardi Gras party and a charity dinner hosted by Haley House called the Souper Bowl (yes, pun intended), we enjoyed sleeping in, snowshoeing at Arnold Arboretum, reading, shoveling with neighbors, and -because we were lucky enough to have power throughout- cooking/baking. Lots and lots of cooking/baking.

Outside-blizzard-2013

Jade vs snow

Gluten-free cranberry muffins

Poached egg breakfast

Cat chills

Snowshoeing - taking a rest

The hard part was standing up again!

Arbs sledders

Holding out under the snow

How did you take advantage of the opportunity to do a little less?

The Art of Staying Home

03 Thursday Jan 2013

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cat-love, craft-tastic, goals, jamaica-plain

Rain and drapes

I’ve been trying to teach myself how to stay home. No easy task for a kid who likes to get up and go. Bike tours! Museums! Friend’s kitchens! Theater! Community classes!

Staying home affords numerous luxuries, however infrequently I convince myself to partake in them. Laundry and folding and Studio 360 podcasts. Yarn crafts and Desert Island Discs or On Being podcasts. Baking. Movies screened on a window shade draped over our wooden clothes dryer, via the fancy hi-tech projector. Hand quilting and talking dreams and desires with my partner. Dancing alone to many fabulous vinyl albums, played scritch-scratch free on a stereo I’ve had since age eleven.

Yarn skein on record player

Staying home is also fairly cheap. Being out means dinners out and, for my partner, gas usage as his car eats up the miles between work, band practice, and game nights. Me, I’m more likely to fall victim to some gift item I NEED to purchase for friend or family. Similar, the compulsion to purchase things to be creative with, instead of using what I have, which is plenty.

It’s hard. The world beckons and I itch to follow the whistle.

Lovely are the moments when I can ignore the piper. (Bet you wondered where that analogy was going.)

Jack cat with the records

Librarytour: Free Tiny Library Spotted in JP

17 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments, Librarytour

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

book-love, giving, jamaica-plain

A friend, knowing me to be of the library-lovin’ sort, introduced me to the concept of a Little Free Library. Naturally, I was smitten. Library, little, and free being three words that move me with some speed to cheers, coos, or great gasps of celebratory excitement.

And then one turned up in my neighborhood.

Little Free Library on South Street v1

Little Free Library on South Street v2

I was a little concerned at first, because the library sits perched on a city-owned structure. However it’s stayed, and even grown a solution to keeping out the rain. I look forward to noticing the ebb and flow of it’s collection, as well as adding a few contributions of my own.

Little Free Library on South Street v3

A Tale of Two Pedestrian Crossings

04 Tuesday Dec 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Boston Moments

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

arnold-arboretum, jamaica-plain, transportation

I have a funny relationship with pedestrian crossing signals: sometimes I don’t want to push the button. Yes, I want to cross the street. No, I don’t want to be struck by a vehicle.

For much of my life, crossing safely with the light hasn’t been an option. See a busy street, dart across. Or: see an empty street, meander while the traffic is far, far away. Steady red hand for both. The flashing walk or “white man” (as my cousin calls it), nary to be found. Boston in particular boasts many twenty-second count-downs at four/five-lane, highway-speed boulevards. (Thanks, Boston.)

Then I moved to JP and met, exhibit A: my favorite walk signal.

IMG_2686

It may not look like much, but this crossing sign at the Arborway not only responds with the most satisfying speed, it also has a comfortable space in the middle to wait if need be.

<tangent>I once heard a father tell his two young children “well, now you’ve screwed yourselves!” when they rushed the light and got stranded. He wins the award for the most inappropriate and darkly amusing thing said to kids trapped between lanes of speeding vehicles.</end tangent>

IMG_2691

I readily admit that I’ve taken friends to visit this cross walk towards the green goodness of Arnold Arbs. It’s that great.

Exhibit B: the walk signal with which I have a more complicated relationship. Press the button and you usually have to wait. And then, embarrassingly, traffic on a very busy, very fast road is brought to a halt so that you, in all your importance, can saunter across for something like forty seconds. You could execute some fantastic cartwheels during that time.

crossing to the pond

I was very excited when the city installed this cross walk last year, because getting from one side to the other at Jamaica Pond was the pits. Now, though, when all those cars stop and wait for me, I am filled with guilt. Maybe it’s complexity of that portion of the Jamaicaway, or the fact that I’m often the only one crossing and, with my bike, this act takes probably five seconds. Not that I think the city should change it . . .

new crossing button

Two signals on the same road and a different relationship with each!

Buying A New Bike: One Woman’s Journey

19 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by Phoebe (she / hers) in Bike Life

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bike-commuting, bike-love, cambridge, goals, jamaica-plain

My first step was to wish for a new bike.

Back a number of years I met a lovely woman riding a shiny, well-kept and smooth contoured road bike by a company I’d never heard of. She intrigued me further by explaining how she believed the bike’s particular geometry -specifically the shorter length top tube– was a natural fit for the female body.

My second step was to continue riding my “$60 police auction special” Raleigh for four years. Through sun and rain and snow and one thankfully minor accident on a hill with a car. This step included a continued desire for the bike of my dreams to suddenly appear in my life, as if unbidden, and pretty much for free.

Packin' the bags full of yarn and crochet

The “police auction special”

My third step was to consider my values:

  • Buy used when possible
  • If not used, then go local, independent, neighborhood-based, community-minded
  • Smaller manufacturers first
  • Don’t get seduced by the allure of the Perfect, or the Expensive
  • Don’t go flashy
  • Pay only as much as is comfortable to spend again if the bike gets stolen

My fourth was to make a list, which I presented with flourish (and perhaps a trace amount of geeky embarrassment) to shop attendants.

My fifth was to visit nearby retailers, trying used and new, refining my list, balking at price tags. My original budget was $600, which I thought could bag a more-than-decent mid-range bike. True, had not I been searching for a bike with drop handle bars, which I heard help reduce wrist strain, something I’ve struggled with since becoming a regular commuter with a desk job (typing, typing, typing.)

Finally, as the weather cooled, I reached the point where I feared I’d have to go beyond my budget to purchase something that didn’t have most of the features I wanted. But then one morning (sixth step, but also a first) I happened to glance at the Boston Craiglist bicycle sale ads, typing in the brand I’d discussed with the woman from earlier in this long tale. And lo. Behold.

Desmond the Lemond

The road bike prize

Coming in well below budget ($400), Desmond Puddin’ the LeMond – a prize from 2005, sold by a gentleman who took gentle care of the newest member of my household. Another $150 bought me a rack and fenders (and the labor to install them.)

Here, at the end of my list, is where I express gratitude to the ladies and gents of the many bike shops I haunted, rumpled list in tow, hopeful gleam in my eye:

  • Bikes Not Bombs, Jamaica Plain
  • Broadway Bicycle School, Cambridge
  • Cambridge Bicycle Shop, Cambridge
  • Eastern Mountain Sports, Cambridge
  • Ferris Wheels, Jamaica Plain (my home shop)
  • Quad Bikes, Cambridge
  • Superb Bicycle, Brookline
  • Wheelworks, Somerville and Belmont

‘Til next bike!

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