Thursday Doors: Valencia, Spain II
Posted on: June 25, 2026
- In: Doors | Spain | Travel
- 95 Comments
My previous Thursday doors post featuring Valencia was well received, so I decided to share more doors and windows from this amazing Spanish city.

The Church of Los Santos Juanes

A close up of the front of the church

Found around the back of the Church of Los Santos Juanes. It’s always good to go around to the back.

The Palace of Marquis de Don Aguas, which houses the fabulous Ceramics Museum





The splendid facade of the building is worth the visit alone.

Another entrance to the Ceramics Museum.

The front door to The Church of St. Andrew the Apostle

Another entrance to the Church of St Andrew the Apostle

Door to an ice cream parlour

An old door frame is incorporated into a painting on a building’s wall. I love this!
Thursday Doors is a weekly challenge created by Dan Antion for people who love doors and architecture to come together to admire and share their favourite door photos, drawings, or other images or stories from around the world. If you’d like to join us, simply create your own Thursday Doors post each (or any) week and then share a link to your post in the comments on Dan’s blog post. Check out all the other amazing door posts. https://nofacilities.com/2026/06/25/czechoslovak-room/
Copyright ©2026 darlenefoster.wordpress.com – All rights reserved
- In: Awards
- 63 Comments
I would like to thank long-time blogging friend and fellow author, Stevie Turner, for nominating me for the Sunshine Blogger Award. Please check out Stevie’s interesting blog and her great selection of character-driven books.
Before I answer Stevie’s questions, here’s a list of the rules for anybody taking part:
Guidelines
1) Display the award’s official logo somewhere on your blog
2) Thank the person who nominated you
3) Provide a link to your nominator’s blog
4) Answer your nominator’s questions
5) Nominate up to eleven bloggers
6) Ask your nominees eleven questions
7) Notify your nominees by commenting on their blogs
My responses to Stevie’s questions:
- Is your cup of life half full or half empty?
Mine is always half full! In fact I would say it’s more than half full more like 75% full.
2. What are you afraid of?
I have an irrational fear of rodents.
3. Do you believe in an afterlife?
I was brought up in a Christian home, and I believe in life after death. I also believe that the afterlife can be different for different people.
4. What is one thing you wish for?
I wish people would just get along. I will never understand petty squabbling. Agree to disagree and move on.
5. Would you rather do a skydive or go punting on a calm river?
Punting on a calm river sounds idyllic. (I had to look up the word punting)
6. What would you like politicians to ban?
I would like bullying to be banned.
7. Would you rather go to a music festival where your favourite band is playing, or watch them play on TV instead?
I love live music and have been to many live events over the years, but I no longer enjoy the crowds so I guess for now I have to settle with watching them on TV. But I will never forget seeing the Eagles live on stage or The Moody Blues performing outside at a lake near Vancouver. It would not have been the same on TV.
8. There’s one thing (not a person) you have with you when you become stranded on a desert island. What is that one thing?
A big fat book. I couldn’t bear to be without something to read.
9. What would you like to learn?
I would like to learn another language fluently. I live in Spain, but my Spanish is not fluent.
10. What in your opinion is the best social media site for writers to get their work noticed?
I think an active blog is the best social media platform for getting your writing noticed. I am on other social media sites but my blog has gotten me the best exposure. Partly because the blogging community is so very supportive.
11. Could you dance the Cha-cha if your life depended on it?
Sure, if my life depended on it. I’m not saying I would do it well!
I have been nominated for this award a few times already, so I’m not going to nominate any bloggers specifically. However, if anyone would like to answer any or all of my questions, here they are:
- If you could be any animal, what would it be and why?
- What is a book you read that stuck with you for a long time?
- What is a quality you look for in a friend?
- What is your pet peeve?
- What brings you joy?
- What have you done in your life that you are most proud of?
- What is the scariest thing you have ever done?
- If you could go back to being any age again, what age would that be?
- If you could have lunch with a famous person, alive or dead, who would it be?
- What is your comfort food?
- Why do you follow a blog?
Four-Legged Friends
Posted on: June 12, 2026
- In: animals | Travel
- 78 Comments
“Our perfect companions never have fewer than four feet.” ― Colette
As much as I enjoyed seeing friends and family during my trip to Canada, seeing my animal friends was also a treat.
My granddaughter has four wonderful dogs and owns a boarding kennel. So lots of doggie love there for me.

Gordon is living out his senior years at her house. He barked at me when I took his picture. I guess I disturbed his nap.

Carl is a real little character. The only time he stood still enough for me to take his picture was when he was eating.

Rona has been part of the family the longest and loves her grandma.

Soda is a real sweetie. She was a puppy when I last saw her, but is all grown up now and a very good dog.

Guests at the boarding kennel my granddaughter owns. Such a variety.

There were pets every place I stayed. Brandy, my friend’s dog, is waiting for a treat. She loves bananas.

Lily Mae, another friend’s dog, relaxing in her lovely garden after we took her for a walk.

Alfie, another friend’s cat, who slept with me.

Bimbhe, my grandcat on Mudge Island.

Bimbhe with his mommy. He is one big cat.

Our newest grandkitty, Princess Malfi. I was happy to meet her, and she slept with me too. (Don’t tell my dogs)

Malfi and her mommy.

A doggie stopped by to say hello at my book signing. I didn’t get his name.

There was wildlife too. The deer came to visit on Mudge Island. You have to look hard to find them under the tree.

In Calgary, I woke up to a deer resting in my friend’s front yard.

And of course there were the cows we came upon in a field.
“The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man.” – Charles Darwin
- In: Writing
- 51 Comments
Pip: Every good episode starts with a door — sometimes literally, as Darlene Foster’s blog will demonstrate today.
Mara: We’re covering two distinct territories: a short story born from a creative writing challenge, and a book excerpt paired with a review. Let’s start with the challenge that turns a photograph of a door into fiction.
Creative Writing Challenge
Pip: The premise here is elegant — Dan Antion’s Thursday Doors Writing Challenge asks writers to pick a submitted door photo and let it spark something. The question the story has to answer is: what lives behind that door, and what does it cost to step through it?
Mara: The door chosen was submitted by Yvette Prior, and the story it unlocks opens quietly: “Good days were rare for Erin. The new medication was working.”
Pip: Those two sentences do a lot of heavy lifting. We understand immediately that Erin is managing something — anxiety, OCD, something unnamed — and that today is fragile in the way that good things are when you’re not used to them.
Mara: The story builds that fragility carefully. Erin dusts invisible crumbs, wipes an already clean table, times her tea steep to the exact minute. Every detail is precise and earned.
Pip: And then the teapot drips, and she has to talk herself back from the edge — three attempts to pour without spilling. It’s a small, tense, completely believable scene.
Mara: Then the blast hits. The window shatters, the flamingo flies, and the last line lands hard: “She knew something like this would happen. The day had been too good.”
Pip: A whole character arc in under six hundred words.
Mara: From a story sparked by a single image, let’s move to a book that’s been out in the world long enough to earn a review.
Book Excerpt And Review
Pip: The Amanda in Ireland post is a two-for-one: an excerpt from Amanda in Ireland: The Body in the Bog, shared on Sally Cronin’s platform for indie authors, alongside a review.
Mara: Sally Cronin runs what the post calls a space for “book marketer and indie supporter extraordinaire” work — her Smorgasbord blog is a regular home for authors sharing their writing directly with readers.
Pip: Putting an excerpt next to a review is smart positioning — the excerpt shows the voice, the review supplies the credibility.
Mara: The full excerpt and review live over at Smorgasbord Invitations, which is where readers can dig into the actual prose and see what a bog in Ireland does to a plot.
Pip: A door that hides a disaster, a bog that hides a body — there’s a theme here about what’s waiting just out of frame.
Mara: Next time, we’ll see what else is lurking just around the corner.
Book Signings and Special People
Posted on: June 6, 2026
- In: Amanda Travels | Books | Family | friends | Travel
- 78 Comments
It’s always wonderful to meet an author you admire. When I was in Calgary, I learned that Elinor Florence, the author of Finding Flora, a book I love, was signing books at a nearby Indigo bookstore. My friend kindly took me to see her. She is as lovely in person as I thought she would be.

I also had my own book signings while on the trip.

At Unlimited Characters in Medicine Hat, Alberta.

With adorable Amanda fans.

More Amanda fans, my dad’s cousins

And my 87-year-old Aunt Peggy. I was delighted that she turned up. She has been such a great supporter all these years.

In BC, I had a book signing at Indigo Books in Coquitlam.

Where a dear friend I hadn’t seen for some time dropped in. What a nice surprise.
I saw so many special people on this trip. Of course, I forgot to take pictures of everyone. But here are a few.

The Riverside girls. Nice to meet up with former classmates in Medicine Hat.

A cousin’s dinner in Calgary. Good food and great conversations.

More cousins in Medicine Hat. Lots of reminiscing.
Both great-granddaughters are driving and have their own vehicles! (I know I can’t believe it either)

Off to work!

Off to school!

A catch-up with my little bro in Calgary.

Long-time friends.

A good friend stocking up on books from a little free library in Okotoks.

Sharing a delicious Vietnamese meal with another good friend.

My island daughter.
It was three weeks filled with lots of conversation, laughs, and love!
Scenes from Canada
Posted on: June 1, 2026
- In: Memories | Travel
- 94 Comments
Since returning from my trip to Canada, I feel like I’ve been playing catch-up. I had a wonderful time visiting my children, grandchildren and their children, as well as many other family members and friends. I was in eight different locations in three weeks, so there was a lot of travelling involved. I also had successful book signings in two different provinces.
While going through my photos, I decided to share a few scenes from my many stops.

A typical prairie scene from my granddaughter’s back deck in Alberta. Home ❤️

From the side of the house, her neighbour’s place and horse.

A sculpture in the park across the street from my son’s house in Medicine Hat, carved with a chainsaw by artist Marina Cole. This is what she has to say about this sculpture. “I heard it was a dragon spruce that was coming down, so it just made sense to make a dragon,” she says. “The dragon is one of the cooler pieces I’ve done.”

An afternoon trip to the Kananaskis Country foothills was a treat.

Where we came upon a field of cows minding their own business.

And arrived at an art gallery with a fabulous view of the Rocky Mountains in the distance.

With Adirondack chairs for sitting and enjoying the view.

My daughter’s property on Mudge Island, BC. This is from her wraparound porch, where I enjoyed my morning tea.

An evening walk took us to Dodd’s Narrows for this serene scene.

Mudge Island in May.


Harvesting lavender on Mudge Island.

A game of tic-tac-toe in the forest, anyone?

Leaving Mudge Island, my happy place.

The morning view from my bedroom on Crescent Beach in the Vancouver area.
I am so lucky to have friends and family who live in such picturesque places. (and are willing to put me up).
That’s all for now. More about the trip to follow.























