Monday, March 24, 2008

If you must leave then go ahead


John Wesley Powell was born on this day in 1834. William Morris was also born on the same day.

In 1973, Pink Floyd released "Dark Side of the Moon."

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Daisy


Today in 1743, Georg Friedrich Handel premiered The Messiah.

In 1910, Akira Kurosawa was born.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

Why do you make me blue


From last summer. I've been too busy pruning and recovering to do any hiking, though the weather has been quite tolerable. Pruning: what I thought would be a one-week project at most, is turning out to be far more complex and time-consuming. Who knew there was so much wood in a tree? Egad man, we have carted away two 50-gal containers of very chopped-up branches so far, and I am only now beginning to see a dent in the tree itself (and that's to say nothing of the piles of branches remaining in the yard). This is clearly an annual job, which had been ignored for years. And I haven't even started on the pear tree. And the time is very ripe for starting a garden again....

But in 1895, the brothers Auguste and Louis Lumiere showed their first motion picture.

In 1903, Niagara Falls ran dry due to drought.

In 1930, Stephen Sondheim was born. William Shatner followed a year later, and Andrew Lloyd Webber came along in 1948.

In 1962, The Beatles released their first full-length LP in the UK, Please Please Me.

And in 1986, the chief librarian of Wilberforce University in Ohio, one of the oldest predominantly black universities in the United States, was puzzled to find a copy of Scriptores Reis Rustica (Writings about Country Life) printed in Bologna in 1496, while rummaging through some old magazines. The 300-page volume had been rebound using the original wooden covers. No-one could guess how it came to be there.

Friday, March 21, 2008

No rest for the wicked

Found these growing in the 'V' between limbs of one of the apple trees.

My new favorite blog

Johann Sebastian Bach, Modest Mussorgsky, and Florenz Ziegfield were all born on this day (1685, 1839, and 1869, respectively).

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

ambiguous, not ambivalent


I enjoy a bit of ambiguity now and then. Ok I won't lie: I thrive on it. I eat, breathe and poop ambiguity. Nothing is fixed or certain. What is this picture? It's a composition, a study, a background, a texture, a photograph of a log, nothing.

In 721 bce, the first lunar eclipse was recorded, in Babylon.


Tuesday, March 18, 2008

flight of the bumblebee


Not my photo. So ya know. Seemed pretty appropriate right now, though.

Nikolai Andreevich Rimsky-Korsakov was born on this day in 1844.

Monday, March 17, 2008

available balance


No, really!

It is, of course, St. Patrick's day. I'd be celebrating on Montserrat if I could (it's an official holiday there). Maybe some day.

It's also Nat King Cole's birthday (1919).

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Ol' man



In ancient Rome, today would be the first day of Bacchanalia. Hello spring!

In 1926, Robert Goddard launched the first liquid-fueled rocket.

In 1968, more than 500 Vietnamese civilians were killed in the My Lai massacre.

And in 1995, the Mississippi state legislature finally ratified the 13th amendment to the U.S. constitution, formally abolishing slavery.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Turkey buzzards


On this day, apparently according to time-honored turkey-buzzard tradition, the Turkey Buzzards return to Hinckley, Ohio.

And in music history, Lightnin' Hopkins was born on this day, in 1912.

In 1783, George Washington asked his officers to not support the Newburgh Conspiracy, a potential officers’ insurrection due to long-overdue wages. Washington subtly revealed that he had sacrificed much as well, and the officers relented.

Friday, March 14, 2008

If we make it back


My latest. An original design, based on 1) images of shoes from Carolingian and early Christian art, 2) extant late Roman-era shoes, 3) period design motifs and 4) period construction techniques. I think they would have looked exotic but not eye-poppingly out-of-place in Charlemagne's court.


How we deal with this will be very telling. I suspect we'll ignore it, or call it an 'internal issue for China,' or something, at least until BushCheney's out of office, but it's a growing problem (and if XinHua acknowledges it, then it's probably getting hard to suppress). Predictably, India is staying out of it as much as possible (that's their policy, I presume it secures something like peace along their long border). It will affect the Olympics, though, perhaps even lead to some privately-organized boycotts, and therefore will affect trade, and that is the only thing that matters these days. Disrupt Chinese-American trade, and you've disrupted the global economy.

This is amazing, though, amazingly cool.


Georg Philip Telemann, Casey Jones, and Albert Einstein were all born on this day, in 1681, 1864, and 1879, respectively.

And in 1840, the Times reported that, for the second winter running, foal-like tracks, but 'of considerable size' were discovered, running for 12 miles through the glens of Orchy, Lyon and Lochay, south of the fairy-haunted Rannoch Moor in Scotland.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

In the balance


My shop was broken in to the other night. F-ing thieves cleaned me out: merchandise, materials, tools, Phil's bike, gone. At least $5k lost. Hi ho. Life (and business) goes on. I'm rebuilding.

In 1921, Mongolia (then Outer Mongolia) declared its independence from China under the leadership of the Black Baron (aka the Mad Baron and the Bloody Baron, ahem) Roman Ungern von Sternberg, a Russian-East European aristocrat disenfranchised by the October Revolution.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

old brown shoe

Probably obvious, but this is not my work. Not my photograph, not my shoe. It's a Roman-era shoe, which I used as part of the inspiration for the pair of shoes I just delivered, which you'll see here, tomorrow.

Some very interesting reading about the Spitzer hoohah.

In 1930, Mahatma Gandhi started a 240 mile march to the sea, in protest of the British monopoly on salt in India.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

My sentiments, only better

Larisa Alexandrovna sums up my sentiments on the Spitzer hoohah. She concludes:

Spitzer's sexual activities really only affect his relationship with his wife and family. They only affect us if those relationships are illegal, which in this case it appears to be so. But to target and investigate someone in hopes of finding something illegal is also illegal. I am not comfortable right now that Spitzer was legally investigated, despite the allegations of what he was actually caught doing and the fact that it was a criminal activity.

And I am certainly not comfortable with the hysteria over two consenting adults having sex, while no one cares that the Bush administration lied us into an illegal war in which nearly a million Iraqis have been killed and tens of thousands of Americans have either been destroyed or killed. I am also not happy that the illegal domestic spying this administration has engaged in appears to have nothing to do with terrorism. I am not surprised by this, of course. What I am surprised by is that no one else seems to care that the White House is more interested in sex between consenting adults than in catching a terrorist.

Siegelman, Spitzer... who's next?

I'd like to share this with you. I think it begins to approach a difficult issue. That's a big step, considering the issue (more on that later).

The fact that Governor Spitzer's activity with a hooker is being reported as hot news is puzzling, so I thought about it: Why is some straight guy being persecuted for hiring a hooker? A female hooker? I think we all assume that everybody in Washington does that, don't we? So, why him? Why not the many guys guilty of much dirtier stuff?

I personally think this story is two things: 1, a "Look at that interesting thing over there!" story, a distraction from another, more threatening-to-whoever story; and 2, a case of a Bush-appointed D.A. acting on orders from above, a la Alabama. I just think the timing is interesting, following his scathing criticism of the Bush administration, not too long ago (criticism was published in October '07, the recordings of the governor were made in February '08). The schadenfreude coming from Wall Street may also be telling.

To say the details of this investigation are murky and dubious (as Sam Seder just said on the radio) is to give them great credit. Something is rotten here. My advice to the Governor: Don't resign, but for god's sake stay out of convertibles and small aircraft.

Send in the Clowns


In 1702, the first regular English-language newspaper, the Daily Courant, began publishing in London.

Since then, March 11 has apparently been a quiet news day (if you're not Lithuania [declared independence in 1990] or Paul McCartney [knighted in 1997]).

Monday, March 10, 2008

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Pomiculture


They're singing "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," and it was hot. They really brought it to life. It's still ringing in my head.

I am learning about pruning, the hard way. I found a book about caring for fruit trees, and it had a chapter on pruning older trees, so I read that (it has proven to be useful), but mostly I'm learning just by looking and carefully cutting. You have no idea how much wood is in a tree, until you try to prune it. You feel like you've removed a whole trees-worth of wood, then you look up and can't even see where you were cutting. Amazing. One of three trees is almost done now, two weeks after I started (we're working on the two apple trees at the same time, but one more so than the other).

In 49 bce, Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, and in 1957, Osama bin Laden was born.
Is this irony?

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Let the Sun Shine In


They're finishing "Aquarius/Let the Sun Shine In." It was glorious fun, as you can see.

Nature photography is fun, but people are such interesting -and willing-- subjects. I personally don't understand how journalists and documentarists deal with their subjects, and their subjects' possible desire for privacy or anonymity, but that's fine because I really like shooting rehearsals and performances. You know, where the people being photographed really want to be seen and remembered.

This was taken at the first annual Follies concert, Phil's choir program's pops concert. I'd try to describe it, but words fail: vaudeville? revue? Almost Moulin Rouge! without the hookers or the TB: fast moving, upbeat and funny but with a couple of serious turns for the sake of variety. No host, no emcee- after a brief introduction, the curtain opened to them singing and only closed for intermission until the show ended; when a song finished, the lights faded for a second or two (really) and came back up on a new act, ready to sing. It was really spectacular, and quite professional-looking. I got a bunch of good pictures, which I'll be posting over the next few days.

Today is Carl Philipp Emmanuel Bach's birthday (1714).

In 1782, ninety-six Native Americans were murdered by Pennsylvania militiamen –with mallets- at Gnadenhutten, Ohio, in what became known as the Gnadenhutten Massacre.

And in 1917, the February Revolution began in St. Petersburg (it was February by the Old Calendar in use in Russia at the time), sparked by food shortages. Tsar Nicholas II turned the throne over to his more moderate brother Michael a week later. Michael wisely refused, but oversaw the assembly of the Provisional Government, initially led by Prince George Lvov, and later (after the tumultuous July Days) a liberal aristocrat, Alexander Kerensky. By October, Kerensky's government would fall to the Bolsheviks.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Over the hills and far away


From last night's concert, the first annual Follies concert. Great, great stuff, wow! If you're reading this, and you were in the show: GOOD JOB, dayum! Pictured are Russel and Taylor, playing Over the Hills and Far Away. Guys, you rocked!

Henry Purcell and Maurice Ravel were both born on this day (1659 and 1875).

In 1935, New York City revoked all organ-grinder monkey licenses.

And in 1976, a block of ice the size of a basketball smashed into the roof of a house in Timberville, Virginia, and surprised three people who were watching television. Neighbours who rushed to find out what the noise had been, saw another ice bomb land 50 yards away 20 seconds later.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Hey Abbot!


Photo of the sediment dam, enhanced and adjusted with iPhoto. Fun.

Cyrano de Bergerac was born today (1619), as was Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806), Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844) and Lou Costello (1906).

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

I am not making this up.



Weird dream last night. Very briefly, I was out in the back yard with Harry, and I dropped a piece of soap I was holding (go ahead and laugh, I did-), into an existing hole in the ground. The hole was large enough to see into, but only appeared large enough inside for a rodent or two, maybe a rabbit. I looked, but didn't see the soap. Harry and I talked some more, and he took off. I went back for the soap. I dug out the hole a little bit, and as I did, I uncovered a board or something, and pulling it back, a human skeleton. "Fuck!" I looked away. Call the cops. Call an archaeologist, it's not a forensic issue. "Fuck!" My heart raced. I looked again. Hmmm. Too... yellow. Too ...what's that? I looked closer, and noticed a screw. It was a plastic skeleton.

I woke up. When I remembered the dream, I laughed out loud.

Later, I found what you see in the pictures. The hole is about 3"x5", and is quite new. The concrete seems to be outside the hole. It's under the newer part of the house; seems to lead into a crawl space at best. I'm not even sure a human can get there, but I suppose I'll have to try. What kind of critter would do that?

Cotton Eyed Joe


I sure hope Clinton and Obama have the sense to realize that John McChange is the real opponent. They both need to start campaigning against him, immediately, and drop the attacks on each other.


It's Learn From Lei Feng Day in China.

On this day in 1888, according to the Madras Mail, pieces of bricks fell into a Pondicherry (India) classroom in the presence of many investigators. One brick marked with a white cross was placed in the centre of the room; a similar-sized brick, marked with a black cross, dropped out of the air onto the first brick. In reference to such appearances in closed rooms, Charles Fort said: 'Oh, yes, I have heard of 'the fourth dimension,' but I am going to do myself some credit by not lugging in that particular way of showing that I don't know what I am writing about.'

And Heitor Villa-Lobos was born in 1887.




And of course, a few words about John McCain's conservative credentials, from one Dan of Portland Maine:

-IMMIGRATION: he wrote the bill granting amnesty to illegal immigrants (co-sponsored by Ted Kennedy).
-TAXES: he voted against the Bush tax cuts multiple times, but now campaigns as a lifelong tax-cutter.
-ENERGY TAX: wrote a bill (co-sponsored by democrat Joe Lieberman) imposing a massive tax on energy which, according to the Department of Energy, would drastically raise the price of gasoline and put 300,000 Americans out of work.
-ECONOMY: as recently as December 2007 he admitted he "does not know the economy very well" and needed to get better at it.
-1st AMENDMENT: he wrote the McCain-Feingold campaign finance bill that was declared to be an unconstitutional infringement of the 1st Amendment (co-sponsored by progressive Democrat Russ Feingold).
-2nd AMENDMENT: he was called the "worst 2nd amendment candidate" by the president of the NRA.
-CHRISTIANS: campaigning in 2000, he famously described Christian leaders as "agents of intolerance."
-PROFESSIONAL ETHICS: ringleader of the infamous Keating 5 in the Savings and Loans scandal, which cost US tax payers $160 billion. We're still paying off their stupid game.
-PERSONAL ETHICS: McCain cheated on his first wife after she had a severe accident that left her partially disabled. He then divorced her and moved to Arizona to marry his multi-millionaire mistress, whose daddy bought McCain a spot in Congress.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

He had it coming



More from Sunday. The top one is of the trail through the birch forest (too obvious?), and the bottom is the other group of elk.

Bulletin from the ruling class: You don't matter. I really don't know how else to read that story.

John Mc Change on Social Security

It's Antonio Vivaldi's birthday (1678). Also Chicago's official birthday (incorporated in 1837).

Monday, March 03, 2008

Toutle-ing



Mt. St. Helens, viewed from the Toutle river valley. We're looking at the crater, the side of the mountain that fell off. Yesterday, my friend Mark and I drove up to the sediment dam that the Corps of Engineers built after the eruption, to prevent the mud and ash from choking the Toutle and the Columbia rivers. We didn't start out trying to find it; we just stumbled across it, but it was a cool find. Pretty clever thing, really: they built a dam that only slowed the water, allowing the mud to settle, so the river below could remain clear. It's the site of a predominantly young birch forest now, home to at least a couple of small herds of elk (we saw two herds, anyway). And one strange doorway.

It's Vincent van Gogh's birthday (1853).

In 1972, police officer Ray Schoke was on his way to Loveland, Ohio, when he spotted a three-foot-tall upright creature with leathery skin like a lizard and the face of a frog near the Little Miami River. It was later spotter by fellow officer Mark Matthews and a local farmer. Both officers have since changed their names because of the ridicule, and Matthews moved to Florida.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Nothing personal


From National Geographic, March 1924 (Vol. XLV, no. 3). I thought it was funny.

In 1836, Texas declared its independence from Mexico.

Bedrich Smetana was born on this day in 1824. Kurt Weill followed in 1900, with Dr. Seuss four years later.

In 1975 six schoolgirls, all aged 12, walking on Llanaber beach, near the northern end of the promenade in Barmouth, Wales, saw something strange about 200 yards ahead of them. It was a ten-foot-long black monster with a long tail, long neck, huge green eyes like saucers and feet with three pointed protruding nails. It walked towards the sea and entered the water. The girls fled in terror. Their teacher, Colin Palmer, said that various adults had admitted seeing the creature. (Fortean Times)