Friday, November 10, 2017

Borbaatar

To all the followers of my blog, I do apologize for not being active for some months. The good news is that our family has settled comfortably in our new home country: Mongolia. The bad news is that there are no hippos to be found here, and many people have no idea what a hippo is. Yes, I was shocked too... they do exist!

Luckily, my Mongolian friends are fast learners, they themselves, their families and friends, are catching up fast. So word is spreading, and artists are being mobilized to fill the existing hippo void. In other words: the "Hippofication" of Mongolia has begun. 

I am very proud to present another "First" of my collection. The first hippo painting of Mongolia and my first painting on leather.

The artist (short name Ari), is selling his work to tourists at the steps of the Zaisan Memorial, in Ulaanbaatar (capital of Mongolia). Ulaan means: red, and Bataar means: hero. So the name of the capital translates as: Red Hero. I could have called this painting: Ari, after the painter, but looking at the face of the hippo I decided that brown (Bor) hero (Baatar) suits it better. 

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Drunken Hippo

About five years ago, my husband brought back a large hippo from Kenya. It almost caused him to miss his flight home, but it also came with a very funny story, making up for the stress of the adventure.

During the weekend he had planned a little trip to the Tsavo National Park, not far from Nairobi. In the lobby of the hotel he saw huge hippo statues, so he started to ask where they came from and who made them because he wanted to buy a small one. The staff had no idea, but the driver who brought my husband to the resort told him that he had a friend in his home village, a wood carver, and artist, who could probably help him out. So, off they went. When they reached the village, they met the guy.... only to hear that he had never in his life made a hippo, but was willing to give it a try. My husband paid the deposit and received the promise that it would be ready in a few days. 

Three days later, my husband and the driver went back to the village to make sure everything was still on track. The good news was that the hippo was halfway done.... the bad news was that the artist was drunk, very drunk. Apparently, the deposit had been a reason to party. So there my husband was, in the middle of nowhere, sharing a beer in a roadside shack in the company of a very happy but drunk artist, who was all the while trying to make a hippo. I am sure you get the picture.

Finally, it was time to pick up the hippo and head straight to the airport. The hippo was finished. Sort of. Nothing could be further done because time was ticking, it was getting dark, and the traffic was horrendous. At some point, the driver asked if he could take a shortcut to the airport because there was no way they would arrive in time to catch the flight. My husband agreed. So the mad dash began. The wish to get to the airport was rapidly replaced... by the hope that the car would not break down. Through the pitch dark slums at full speed, racing through the winding, narrow streets, passing the occasional roadside fires where people stood silhouetted against the flames...and eventually speeding out of the dodgy area with clouds of dust billowing up into the air.

At last, my husband managed to get to his flight, half-running with a misshapen hippo through the terminal and onto the plane. When he came home, he told me not to get too excited about the hippo, because it was not exactly what he had in mind. Upon inspection, it turned out that it has a "good" side and a "not so good" side. He was not finished, or polished at all, and overall a bit rough looking. Shortly after this adventure, we moved to the USA, and the hippo was packed and shipped... only to end up stored in the basement of the new home. 

Now it is moving time again, and a few weeks ago, we discussed this hippo. Should we keep it, or should we leave it behind? It had been in its box for four years now. We decided to unpack it, and to our surprise, it looked much nicer than we both remembered. Then my husband spend a few hours sanding and polishing him, and voila! 

A beautiful looking hippo, almost a yard (meter) long, and sturdy enough to sit on. We thought about a name for a while, but the name we had given him temporarily stuck, so Drunken Hippo it is :-).



Wednesday, May 24, 2017

Cristina

My husband: "Cristina (colleague) is in Malawi this week". Me: "Really? I do not have a hippo from Malawi yet". My husband: "??? ok, ok, ok, I'll ask her....." That's how this newest addition to my collection came into my possession. The stress about not having asked for a hippo, of my husband, transferred to a very busy colleague, on duty travel. I almost felt guilty about it, but it is such a cutie... it was very much worth it! And for anybody out there, looking for hippos at the Kamuzu International Airport (the gateway to the warm heart of Africa) of Lilongwe, Malawi... they have only one more hippo left...

Dear Cristina, thank you for bringing this beauty back. I am going to miss meeting up with you, during one of those "escape the squirrels" days. Will be checking regularly though, how my amazing, funny and cool New York friend is doing :-).






Monday, May 8, 2017

Zulu

My daughter and I were browsing through the last aisle of the outdoor flea market: Elephant's Trunk in Connecticut (from April till September, every Sunday morning). We were a bit tired and ready to go home. I feel it is always like this: either you find little or nothing at all, or you find so many things, you have not enough hands to carry everything back... This was one of those trips, of not finding much.... untill my daughter spotted this beauty, on one of the last tables, next to a pile of African cloths and wooden masks.


He (I thought Zulu is more for a guy?) is handmade by Zulu people (the largest ethnic group in South Africa, with an estimated 10-11 million people living mainly in the province of Kwazulu-Natal (Wikipedia)). I love the colors and the design. The hippos itself is made of wood, the beads are strung in the form of a "suit" around it. My favorite part? No doubt.... his butt!







Amy's Hippos

A few months ago, I published the post: Hippos for Lien. It always makes me very happy when I find a message with this subject in my inbox. Hippo happiness is great, but nothing beats hippo happiness shared by friends. Since I already have a post named: Hippos for Lien, I decided to call this post: Amy's Hippos. Amy is a colleague of my husband, fortunate enough to be posted in Zimbabwe. Since she is encoutering many of "my friends", I suspect she will be contributing more to this blog in the future... as long as she lives there, that is. 


Dear Amy, thank you so much for thinking about me, and sharing these beautiful pictures. I wish I could have been there with you, taking many pictures together....

Sharing a few more hippo pics from my weekend just gone! I took them at Rhino Safari Camp, Matusadona. Enjoy! (text and photo credit: Amy Wickham)













Thursday, February 16, 2017

Hippo Ballerina

From 7 February - 31 July 2017, Dante Park, across from the Lincoln Center in New York City, is the temporary home of a beautiful statue, named: Hippo Ballerina. She is part of an art installation by Danish sculptor Bjorn Okholm Skaarup. She is over 15 feet tall (4.57 m), weighs 2.5 tons, and is made of bronze and copper.  

I have been people watching for a while, sitting on one of the chairs, very close to the statue. It was so nice to see people interact and react. Most people started to smile right away when spotting her. Something I understand oh so well :-).


Photo and information credit: Smithsonian Mag

Thursday, February 9, 2017

Hippo Spoon

It is always hard to leave friends behind, every time we move. And it is equally hard when friends move, and we are the ones left behind. But luckily this cloud has a silver lining, in the form of being able to visit friends all over the world. So when my husband had to go to Zimbabwe for work, he made some time to visit our friends, who moved there a few years ago. It is always nice to catch up and be able to experience a country as a local. As local as you can become as an expat that is. And in exchange for some goodies from the US, he brought back a lovely hippo-gift. Another first. My fist hippo spoon. I have not used it yet. Maybe I should. Dear Inge, thank you so much for arranging this lovely gift. Zimbabwe is still on my bucket list, hopefully, when we have the chance to tick that off our list, you will still be there.


Thursday, February 2, 2017

Hippos for Lien

Today's post is about the "shared hippo-happiness" I mention in the introduction of my blog. Once in a while, I receive messages directly or via my husband or friends, with the subject title: Hippos for Lien. One of my friends even has a special folder on her phone to store all the hippo related stuff, her family and friends think I should see.

So this post is for all of you, to thank you for thinking about me, and making my day when sharing your finds. Below are some very lovely examples from last year. Keep (hippo) happy and above all, please keep sharing :-) HHHLL


I saw this hippo on Saturday (Attaching for Lien) (text and photo credit: Amy Wickham)
 Attaching some more hippo love (from Kariba and the Zambezi) (text and photo credit: Amy Wickham)


I was on the shores of lake Leman in Switzerland last weekend and found this baby hippo. Not in the lake, but in the display of a bronze artists' shop. In case you would like to diversify your collection from ceramics to bronze. See attached, photographed in Vevey.

(text and photo credit: Jo Cadilhon)

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Herma

It is hard to translate the term enabler into my mother tongue. Let alone the term for an enabler of an enabler. I think we would refer to those people by saying " that person knows a person and that person knows a person who collects, in my case, hippos". This is an amazing story about how sometimes, things and people come together.

In October of 2015, a friend of my mother in law (hence the name of this post) visited a Quilting Exhibition in Maastricht, the Netherlands. where she found an embroidered hippo (black inside part), handmade in Africa. Apparently, by somebody called Grec R. Knowing that my mother in law is always on the lookout for hippos, she got it right away. Then my parents in law went to a fabric store called: De Naaidoos (the Sewing Kit) in a little village: Nieuw Buinen. This village is not far from where they grew up. My mother in law found the pieces of cloth for the frame, and my father in law discovered that the owner of the store is actually a distant cousin.     

The result of all of this is a beautiful piece of art, with a quilted frame, arriving by mail as a present, on time for my birthday. A wonderful example of how hippos are bringing family and friends together. A true enabler and enabler of an enabler's project, I am very proud to own.

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Power of Plush

Too many times I have mentioned in my posts, that I am no longer collecting plush hippos. I think I have to stop that, because equally as many times, I have found excuses to bring them home with me anyway. This sweet little thing made me surrender :-). I tried fooling myself, that I would only use her as a prop for photo shoots or as practice material, or.... forget about it. When it is a hippo, wearing a tutu and looks irresistibly cute... plush or no plush... It comes home with me!


Hippo Tree

A few years ago, I had to find a safe place for my growing collection of Hippo-Christmas-Ornaments. Cat-safe, that is. Luckily, our two cats are not that interested in the "re-decorating" of our Christmas trees. However, one of them has done the "Can-you-reach-the-top-in-one-jump-challenge" once. The large and lazy one is banging on the low-hanging decorations, once in a while. The higher ones take too much energy to reach, and the lower ones are being pounced... not because it is that much fun, but sometimes they are just hanging is his way. 

So just as a temporary solution, I put a few on our "Art Tree" made of metal. It was an anniversary gift from me to my husband a few years ago. Seeing it, it actually looked pretty good. When my husband saw it, he started to complain, about "his tree, being full of clutter". But then agreed... Christmas ONLY :-). So since then, once a year our metal art tree becomes the "Hippo-Xmas-Tree". By the looks of it...it is starting to run out of space....


Thursday, January 12, 2017

Pretty in Pink

Often times, I describe my affection for hippos as a disease. Very serious and incurable (until now). Just recently, I started wondering how long it would take, before I would hear about a therapy/support group, for partners/children of hippo-lovers. Maybe it would be a relief for partners to be into contact with people who understand the stress, of having to bring back a hippo from business trips. The threat of finding the door locked, when coming home without a hippo, is still a joke, but for how long? Or children who understand the embarrassment when a parent buys, wears or drives something hippo in public. What is the best strategy? Sabotage and rebellion, or ignoring and trying to perfect the "become-invisible-act"? Until that day comes, I will treasure these very special occasions like the one I will share with you now. Coming back from my latest hippo-lovers-reunion, my youngest daughter presented me with her surprise, made from air-drying modelling clay. My eldest added the finishing touches, in the form of a bow and mumbled comment: "I like drawing.. not so much this 3D clay stuff".

Of course, sometimes I see their "I don't see this and I don't know her" looks exchange, but as long as I am still spoiled with sweet hippo gifts, I am the happiest hippo-lover-disease sufferer on the planet!