The Scented Hound

Perfume blog with abbreviated perfume reviews & fragrance reviews.


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The Hound Goes to Mexico

Artwork of the Chicxulub asteroid impact

I guess if you’re going to pick a place to vacation, why not make it the epicenter of the largest global disaster in history.  The Hound is vacationing in Chicxulub Mexico, home of the Chicxulub Crater, where 66 million years ago, the largest asteroid ever to hit the earth, plunked down creating a crater over 180 km wide, which set off the global extinction of many of the earths creatures, including the dinosaurs.

Chicxulub266 million years later, the activity in the town of Chicxulub is far less eventful as it’s a small quiet and peaceful fishing village.  But that’s just fine with us as we rented a house for a couple of weeks where our goal is just to unwind and relax.  So far, so good as our first couple days have consisted of going for walks on the beach, reading by the pool and enjoying a few cervazas (beers).

Our temporary Mexican home, Casa Laura.

Our temporary Mexican home, Casa Laura.

I should point out that there was another disaster, albeit pale in comparison,  in Chicxulub upon our arrival.   When I opened my suitcase for the first time, I found that my small bottle of vintage Miss Dior had been half drained as the top came unscrewed during the trip.  My husband asked why I would bring a perfume like that on vacation.  Silly man I thought; never question what a perfumista carries with them on their travels.  Needless to say, my suitcase does smell fantastic.

The internet service here is as slow as the lifestyle, so my presence for the next couple of weeks will be spotty at best.  Besides, I really need to concentrate on important thoughts like when I’m going to have my next cervaza!

Hasta pronto – The Scented Hound


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A New Look and a Bit of a Backstory

Dickie

Dickie at the Carter Center.

I tend to get bored easily.  And looking at the same website month after month gets me a bit itchy, so I decided take a stab at a new look.  I know that the hound picture was maybe a bit iconic and it has served me well and may some day be back, but I wanted to make the site a bit more modern and more personal.   So my new header contains a picture of the original hound in my life Dickie.  Dickie was my first born.  He was found by a friend wandering by himself in the Georgia countryside and was about as big as my hand.  Instead of going to the pound, he ended up at our house.  Dickie was incredibly smart, suffered greatly from separation anxiety and was considered “The Peace Beagle” as we called that him because he hated any kind of conflict or shouting and would insert himself between us when we had an argument.  We even had Dickie and Daddy time which usually consisted of just the two of us on Saturday morning going to the Mrs. Winners restaurant and getting chicken biscuits.  He loved going with me on that ride.  The other thing he loved more than anything else was swimming.  When we lived in Midtown Atlanta, the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library was the unofficial dog park as it had a wonderful field with a pond.  He could swim for hours.  As he was the original Scented Hound,  it was also at the Carter Center where he managed to roll around on numerous dead animals as well as human poop from the neighborhood homeless men.  That was big fun.

The other dog in the picture is Laika who was Dickie’s younger sister (not by birth).  She was two years younger and looked just like him when we brought her home as a pup.  We thought “how wonderful, two of the same sweet dogs”.  I sympathize with parents who have varying personalities in children because Laika was a stinker from the time we brought her home.  She turned out to be 1/3 the size of Dickie, but ruled the house from minute one.  She would get into trouble, run away from home, nip at Dickie if he was having fun; in other words she was pretty much a pain in the ass.  But she could be sweet when she wanted to be and she too was my baby.

In any case, I have a soft spot in my heart for hounds and when I decided to create this blog “The Scented Hound” was an easy fit.  Both Dickie and Laika are long gone, but their memories live on in my heart and now they do also on my site.

Steve


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MEMORIES OF EASTER PAST

EasterLilyMaybe it’s because it’s finally Spring after a long and cold winter or maybe it’s because I’m just getting old and sentimental.  In any case, the other day I was reflecting on my memories of Easter as a child and a flood of warm feelings came rushing back in…

Central Lutheran Church, Minneapolis, MN

Central Lutheran Church, Minneapolis, MN

I grew up in the suburbs of Minneapolis, MN back in the 60s and 70s.  My world was very Ozzie and Harriet and if I look back at it, I was pretty idyllic.  Growing up in Minnesota, the first hints of Spring are greatly anticipated after so long of a harsh winter.  Easter never had the hype of Christmas or Thanksgiving and somehow was a little more low-key except for the Easter Bunny and the candy and the promise of a new Sunday Easter outfit.  Even though we lived in the suburbs, we still travelled into the city to attend church.  We were members of a grand church built in the 1920s, the kind of which aren’t constructed anymore.  Even though it was in the heart of downtown, it always had a very low-key family atmosphere about it.  My family was pretty active in the church, my sisters and I were involved with choir and bible study and I was confirmed in the church in 8th grade.  Even going to confirmation class wasn’t all that bad because two blocks away from the church was a Wonder Bread factory that had a little store with slightly damaged goods in it.  As a kid, you could pick up a Hostess Apple Pie, Cupcake and SnowBall for 25 cents…and they were still warm from just coming off of the factory line!

Easter actually kicked off with Good Friday.  Our church had a three-hour service that involved multiple sermons based on the last words spoken by Christ.  As a child, my parents never took us for the full three hours, but instead we typically would end up hearing the last two sermons.  At the end of the last sermon, a soloist would sing a capella, “Where You There When They Crucified My Lord”.  And as this was being sung, the two-story tall brass cross behind the altar at the front of the church was slowly covered in a black veil.  The church was always so quiet and it was incredibly somber.  I’ll never forget year after year, the older widowed women sitting together would start quietly sobbing.  After the soloist finished, the cross was fully covered and only a black drape covered the front of the church. The choir would then start their march out of the church.  No music, no noise, only the in step sound of their shoes on the stone floor.  It’s surprising how dramatic that service was and I still get chills thinking about how simple yet powerful that service was designed.

Picture the sanctuary filled with hundreds of lillies!

Picture the sanctuary filled with hundreds of lilies!

As I mentioned earlier, all three of us kids were in choir. I being the youngest, was in the Cherub choir, my older sisters were in the High School choir, but in all, there were 3 choirs that were to sing on Easter morning for the Sunrise Service.  This meant that we had to get up by 4:30am to make sure that we were at the church and ready to go for the 6am service.  Of course, I would want to find my Easter basket, but there never was time for that on those mornings.  The Sunrise Service would begin at 6am sharp.  It was still dark outside and all of the choir members would line up to march into the church in just the same manner as they walked out on Good Friday.  The only difference this time is that you could smell the lilies.  Hundreds of lilies were placed throughout the sanctuary and the smell was incredible.  So off we march to our respective places and soon as everyone is set, the grand organ plays what sounds like horns and the lights go up and the black veil at the front of the church quickly drops to the ground and the choirs and congregation sing out with “Jesus Christ is Risen Today.”  What was dark and somber became instantaneously glorious with smiling people along with the sanctuary awash with the white lilies.  Again, for a child it seemed magical and I can only hope that it is one tradition that the church still practices because I’m sure it’s just as dramatic to experience as an adult.

Yes, it looks tacky now, but as a kid this place was special!

Yes, it looks tacky now, but as a kid this place was special!

After the sunrise service, the choirs were expected to sing at the 9am service as well.  As a special treat, this meant that we would go for breakfast with our church friends the Johnson’s between the two services and always at the Fair Oaks Motor Lodge restaurant.  As a family we rarely went out to eat, and for me this was big time fun.  After the 9am service it was time to head home to look for our baskets.  I think my sisters were old enough so theirs would be sitting on the couch whereas I had to go and hunt mine out which was always fun.  Every other year, we would host our aunts and uncles and cousins for Easter supper which meant ham, lamb, scalloped potatoes and other good midwestern fair.  Plus, company meant that the good olives and appetizers were put out which I constantly tried to sneak off the table.

From reading this you would think that I was extremely religious.  Not so. I can’t tell you the last time that I attended church.  But I have to admit that I have many fond memories of growing up with such a majestic and theatrical traditional church setting and I sometime miss the pomp and circumstance that surrounded attending such a place.  It’s nice to be able to look back and still get warm fuzzies from such happy times.

So what does this post have to do with perfume?  Nothing really, except that the smell of lilies can take me back to those Easters of long ago.