Not Quite a Blizzard

News broadcasts most of the week were predicting snow in Jerusalem.  

Salt trucks were ready, extra milk was in the house,

children had planned their day off from school,

the temperature dropped,

it rained most of the night and then this morning…

there was some hail

and for a few minutes it looked like it might be snowing…

but the skies cleared again. 

It is cold, and every few minutes the weather changes,

but so far no blizzard and no new snow photos.

A Time to Plant : Tu Bishvat in Jerusalem

Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, members of his cabinet, and their large entourage have arrived in Jerusalem for talks; serious issues are to be discussed such as Italy’s aid to the Iranian satellite program.

Those most affected by the visit are the other guests and the staff of the King David Hotel,

and the cars stuck in traffic while the official motorcade is allowed to pass.  So are the the people who live along the travel routes, who have to put up with the incessant honking from impatient drivers.

Ceremonial welcomes and state dinners have little to do with the real Jerusalem streets, but  Prime Minister Berlusconi joined the masses by planting a tree in a JNF forest.

Tu Bishvat, the 15th day of the Hebrew month Shvat,  which fell this year on January 30, has become a traditional time for school children across the country to plant trees in celebration of the “New Year of Trees”.

The Jerusalem Botanical Gardens has begun planting.

After a mild winter and some recent rain, the gardens are beginning to come to life.

Colors are starting to appear not only in the Botanical Gardens,

but also in traffic circles

and nature strips around the city.

Not all the trees are budding, however.

The orchards at Kibbutz Ramat Rachel are prepared, but barren.

Agriculture in Jerusalem is mostly a thing of the past, but Kibbutz Ramat Rachel still has some fields in use.

Much of their land was sold to developers,

new roads and walkways in the area have recently been landscaped.

Also, many homes have beautiful plantings.

 As the sign says, Tu Bishvat in Jerusalem 2010,

January 26-February 3

Something good is happening in Jerusalem!