Thursday, June 27, 2013

GALE



So here is what wikipedia says about gales....
gale is a very strong wind. There are conflicting definitions of how strong a wind must be to be considered a gale. The U.S. government's National Weather Service defines a gale as 34–47 knots (63–87 km/h17.5–24.2 m/s or39–54 miles/hour) of sustained surface winds.[1] Forecasters typically issue gale warnings when winds of this strength are expected.
Other sources use minima as low as 28 knots (52 km/h, 32 mph) and maxima as high as 90 knots (170 km/h, 100 mph). Through 1986, the National Hurricane Center used the term gale to refer to winds of tropical force for coastal areas, between 33 knots (61 km/h, 38 mph) and 63 knots (117 km/h, 72 mph). The 90-knot (170 km/h) definition is very non-standard. A common alternative definition of the maximum is 55 knots (102 km/h, 63 mph).[2]
The most common way of measuring winds is with the Beaufort scale /ˈbfərt/,[3] which defines gale as wind from 50 to 102 km/h. It is an empirical measure for describing wind speed based mainly on observed sea conditions. Its full name is the Beaufort Wind Force Scale.
On the Beaufort Wind Scale, a Gale is classified as: Moderate Gale(32–38 miles per hour), Fresh Gale(39-46 mph), Strong Gale(47-54 mph) and Whole Gale(55-63 mph). A Gale is a type of Wind Description preceded by Calm, Light Air, light Breeze, Gentle Breeze, Moderate Breeze, Fresh Breeze, Strong Breeze and succeeded by Storm,Violent Storm and Hurricane on a Beaufort Wind Scale. There is a unique Beaufort Scale number and a unique Arrow Indication for each type of Wind Description mentioned above.

I have no idea if this storm qualified as a gale or not....but it was amazing to be in it from this particular location and I am glad I was able to experience it.  These images were taken at the very beginning ... probably around 9:30 - 10 pm..  Before the wind had really picked up.  My room had a window which faced north - northwest - and all night the wind howled.  I don't think I really slept, and it was the only night I could see the shadow of the lighthouse light as it rotated past my room  (....the light was on every night - but we could never see it because it never got dark enough - but during this storm it did).

When I say the wind howled I mean it.  Kind of a shrill screeching howl that NEVER let up - not even for a second.  It was un-nerving and I found myself wondering at one point if we were safe or not...and where we go anyways...and how would we get there.  (re-look at the video of the road to the lighthouse....).  The next morning as everyone wandered down to breakfast I realized that I wasn't alone...it had kept pretty much everyone up.  The storm lasted about 24 hours...and then the sun came out and the sea was a brilliant blue again.




Friday, June 21, 2013





Summer Solstice.  Where else would I want to be.  Printing on the edge of the Atlantic with a group of women - learning new things under the guidance of Tatana Kellner.  Her energy and humor as a teacher make cramming all of this information into what is  too short a time period worth every second.  This experiential workshop was organized by the Women's Studio Workshop.  I can't say enough about it that would convey how wonderful the experience is.  My head is being filled with sights, sounds, tastes and practices that are uncorking a lot of pent up ideas.

The first image is from the Inverewe Garden - where we spent a few hours yesterday drawing in rain (more images later).  The second is my humble work station.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Rubha Reidh Lighthouse



This is where I am walking in the mornings these days.  Originally I got here like this - but not on a motorcycle (although that would have been fun) - but rather in a van with four other women and our driver - Brian.  Jenny Krantz may remember another bus ride, years back, in Ireland.  On that trip the driver decided that he was afraid of heights and refused to keep going along the cliffside road.  Brian had no such issues - even though you can see the roads were treacherous as well.  There are hikers that come through - but no other people staying here as our small group has taken over all the rooms and we are using the solarium as a print / paper-making studio.  The couple who just bought this place in February are wonderful hosts - although the may not quite know what to make of us.  They have to deal with all sorts of things from pointing out whales to rescuing people who go up the paths in unsuitable shoes.  This afternoon an older woman slipped on the grass and almost went over the edge (her bag did).  She merely broke her wrist, but it could have been much much worse.  There is no 911 to call...and the nearest hospital is 85 km. away.  Away Roger went to take her there.




Tuesday, June 18, 2013




By the time that I reached Inverness on Sunday night - I was more than a mess.  I had been in the same clothes since Thursday morning.  I had stressed myself silly with worry over my suitcase - was it travelling with me to Amsterdam, or had it been sent to Manchester where I might never find it until I took the train down there to retrieve it?  The airport in Amsterdam was entertaining - but not for the entire seven hours I had to wait there.  "Go out and see Amsterdam, " said the young woman behind the counter.  I didn't dare risk getting lost and missing another connection...and I was so mentally tired I wasn't focusing.

The Inverness airport is very small.  LIke a large hangar divided into a couple of sections.  I was the last person through customs behind a young brother and sister from China who spoke no English.  They were in Inverness (?) for a tennis tournament but they had no idea where it was or how to even say the name of it.  The girl kept handing her cell phone to the customs agent.  It took them awhile to sort it out.

THERE WAS MY SUITCASE!  (yay)  I made my way with all my stuff out to the the taxi stand and - get out of dodge - the only guy waiting there was from Lansing, Michigan.  He teaches Environmental Economics at State and he had never been to Scotland either.  We shared a cab into town with a driver who gave us a history lecture the entire way.

I am  now where I'm supposed to be - having a productive time and totally enamored with the scenery.  The days are full of companionship and work.  More about that later.  It is past midnight and I need to get some sleep even though it looks like it is about 7:30 pm here.  (Did I mention there is no "darktime" here.)  Night all.

Friday, June 14, 2013

adventures in air travel....


The one thing about riding business class - at least on this supposedly "short" flight to Atlanta - is that the pilot (Captain Dan) was VERY chatty.  You know how when you are riding economy, and maybe you're in the 23rd row and every once in awhile the pilot will come over the intercom and say something?  But the noise of the plane is so loud that it sounds like gibberish surrounded by white noise and you immediately wonder what it was he was trying to tell you?  Well, that isn't the case in business class.  Captain Dan talked to us often.  Heck, he even came out and shook the hands of everyone and   thanked us for our business.  He then proceeded to go through the entire plane and shake the hand of every service person on board, thanking them for keeping us free.  This was BEFORE the plane had even left the ground.

Me, I was feeling pretty darn good.  The weather was beautiful, they had checked my bag (ahhh my bag - I wonder where it is now?) and given me a boarding pass before I walked into the airport. Going through security was simple and painless.

A ways into the flight Capt. Dan told us to expect a little turbulence - there was a line of storms we had to cross, but we were going to circle west a bit and come in behind them.  Next message:  Atlanta is not letting planes land, so we are going to stay above clouds and circle again.  Next message:  There is a "hole" in the clouds and we are going to "shoot" for it and try and land....it might get bumpy.  It got VERY bumpy.  I could see the airport below us, the the winds were buffeting us about like a paper plane.   Up we went again.  Next message:  Sorry folks, our plane wasn't built to take those 50mph winds, and we are diverting to Columbus, South Carolina.  Next message:  Atlanta would prefer us to go to Savannah where we will refuel.  Don't worry, we have enough fuel to get there.

Savannah - we don't get off.  Some people demand to terminate there....they do get off.  We refuel.  Back in the air - forty minutes to Atlanta - the storms have moved but you can see them in the distance. We land - its midnight.  Four plus hours after we were supposed to have landed.  My connecting flight to the UK - which was to have left at ten was also delayed....but it had taken off ten minutes before we landed.

There is a line.  A very LONG line full of angry, sad, tired people.  Each with their own stories - connections to be made,  It is always interesting to see how people respond.  Some throw tantrums, some heckle the tantrum throwers.  Lots of people who do not speak english - lots of flights were cancelled or late because of these storms - and there are people laying all over the airport sleeping....on the benches, on the floor, huddled in corners.  This isn't a tragedy - it's just a natural occurrence for people who have the privilege of using this kind of transportation.

By the time I get to the head of the line it is four a.m.  The soonest they can get me out is Saturday night (its now Friday morning).  There are no hotel rooms for 30 miles...but here are some food vouchers and come back to the desk at seven and we will probably be able to get you a room somewhere - as people will be getting up early to catch flights.  Staggered out to find juice, coffee, anything.  Sat in a chair and watched Sons of Anarchy on netflix.  At seven, went back to the desk and got a voucher for a room at the Best Western - run by an Indian family who have interesting ideas about decorating.  No rooms clean yet so I was invited to sit in the "lobby" (one couch and a tv) and watch Good Morning America. I passed out....and they woke me up at nine to direct me to my room.  Slept till almost six p.m..  Ihop for a meal.  Back to the airport tomorrow.  Atlanta is hot - and the world-wide mixture of extremely kind and extremely strange people.

Travel is a journey.  If you allow yourself to forget that...you spend a lot of time being uselessly upset.  I would like my luggage to find me at my final destination.  I will really be tired of this outfit by then.  I wrote to the place in Scotland where I had booked rooms for tonight and tomorrow and explained what had happen.  They replied within the hour - telling me that they would have a room and a cuppa tea waiting for me when I got there - because the airport experience "sounds tedious."  Well put.




Wednesday, September 26, 2012





Nowhere is it the same place as yesterday.
None of us is the same person as yesterday.
We finally die from the exhaustion of becoming.
This downward cellular jubilance is shared
by the wind, bugs, birds, bears and rivers,
and perhaps the black holes in galactic space
where our souls will all be gathered in an invisible
thimble of antimatter. But we're getting ahead of ourselves.
Yes, trees wear out as the wattles under my chin
grow, the wrinkled hands that tried to strangle 
a wife beater in New York City in 1957.
We whirl with the earth, catching our breath
as someone else, our soft brains ill-trained
except to watch ourselves disappear into the distance.
Still, we love to make music of this puzzle.
 
~ Jim Harrison ~

Thursday, September 20, 2012

from Cirque du Soleil....

 little tech experiment from google: Breaking with the tradition of point and click web browsing, you can navigate through this unique experience simply by gesturing in front of your device’s camera.

Monday, September 17, 2012



 "Making music is like constructing a machine whose function it is to dredge up emotions in performer and listener alike. Some people find this idea repulsive, because it seems to relegate the artist to the level of trickster, manipulator, and deciever -- a kind of self-justifying onanist. They would prefer to see music as an expression of emotion Rather than a generator of it, to believe in the artist as someone with something to say. I'm beginning to think of the artist as someone who is adept at making devices that tap into our shared psychological make-up and that trigger the deeply moving parts we have in common. In that case the conventional idea of authorship is questionalble. Not that I don't want credit for the songs I've written, but what constitutes authorship is maybe not what we would like it to be. This queasiness about rethinking how music works is also connected with the idea of authenticity." David Bryne, How Music Works.

 Reviews aside - I find the book interesting. Bryne discusses some of the very issues that I spend a lot of time talking through with students. AND. Dancing to Burning Down the House, I discovered, is just as much fun decades later as it was the first time. Great concert in Milwaukee last night - thank you!!

Saturday, September 08, 2012

MORNING GLORY

                        


These days when the weather is cooling down and I can bear to go out in the yard and drink my first cup of coffee, I am immediately drawn to the morning glories growing all over last years Christmas tree.

A couple years ago I saw this idea somewhere - for keeping your tree year round.  We go on our yearly trek to the tree farm in early December and get a robust tree.  Mid January it comes down and we prop it up in a snowbank outside the kitchen window so we can watch the birds use it for shelter as they come to and from the feeder.  By May it is a brown, dry mess - and as everything is turning green in the yard it's planted and staked out back of the studio -  morning glory seeds planted under and around it.

By the end of August very little of the old fir tree is evident, as it has been covered with morning glory vines and flowers.  GLORIOUS.  They last awhile - as they seem to enjoy the cooler weather as much as I do.

Tuesday, September 04, 2012

IT'S BEEN A YEAR ....







....since I last posted on this blog.  But this past weekend a wonderful thing happened, which inspired me to begin posting again.  I was lucky enough to be able to spend time with my niece Audrey - who was visiting with her family from Seattle.  We had a chance to talk about life and art and the future and school.  We even had the chance to do some work together (see our collaborative water color above)!!  So our challenge will be to keep up on our blogs and pass some work back and forth between the middle coast and the west coast.  If you are lucky (HA) we will share some of it here with you.


A friend of mine in Ireland sent me this poem today - and I love it.  Like me, Michael Hefferman was born and brought up in Detroit.  

Pietá

Everyone’s agenda’s different.  Reaching between

ease and contrition, edges weaken, cohesion drifts.
For ages we have witnessed the same scene
through the same windows.  Even the sky shifts
focus.  The ground goes on being the ground.
Nothing is ever mentioned about ecstasies,
longings, renunciations, the peace we found
in momentary meadows darkening into trees.
We could fall into a crack in the countryside
and no one would catch on.  We could combine
the mightiest things the human hand has made,
display them in the world’s greatest room.
Faces agape, we’d wander into the rain,
piecing together cab-fare to take us home.   

by Michael Heffernanfrom 'The Breaking of the Day'(Salmon Poetry, September, 2012)

Saturday, September 03, 2011

The Keystone XL Pipeline

Hundreds of people continue their nonviolent protest outside the White House, urging President Obama to not approve the potentially environmentally disastrous Keystone XL pipeline. The Keystone XL pipeline, which if approved would run from Alberta, Canada to the Gulf of Mexico and carry some 900,000 barrels per day of crude oil refined from bitumen in the Canadian soil, has been denounced by environmentalist Bill McKibben and NASA scientist James Hansen and many other experts. But last week the State Department issued an assessment of the project that concluded that there would be "no significant impact" on natural resources near the pipeline route, while also downplaying the potential for increased greenhouse gas emissions.

The Nation's George Zornick captured the scene at the White House this week, and documented the arrests of protesters.

For more video, visit TheNation.com




My sister Fran was arrested this morning. I'm proud of her - and everyone who went to Washington

Saturday, August 27, 2011

History of Chapbooks




From xylography to xerography, chapbooks tell the history of literacy and disseminate the expression of thought, from musings to manifestos. To enlighten us on this subject Rain Taxi Review of Books editor Eric Lorberer will give an overview of the chapbook, paying special attention to its fascinating history, its variable design elements and formats, and its vibrant role in contemporary literature and publishing. Rain Taxi, a nationally acclaimed journal, includes regular critical commentary on chapbooks and will be launching a Chapbook Finder feature on its website soon. The chapbook is generally a pocket-sized, paper-covered publication, noteworthy for being accessible to create and circulate. Its pages may contain edicts issued by the establishment or criticisms articulated by a counter-culture voice.

Presented in conjunction with the exhibition Text/Messages: Books by Artists and Multiples Mall: A Bookish Fair.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Two favorite poems and a memory.









Last week I was talking to a friend about her recent trip to Ireland - and walking along the flaggy shore that Heaney writes so beautifully about. My mind immediately went back to this evening when the sun was setting and the light was gold and spilling a golden glow over everything - water, land, dog, man. Part of my heart is there.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Onyx Ashanti: This is beatjazz



Onyx Ashanti is a musician, geek, open-source advocate, Maker, collaborator ... and we come back around again to musician. The intrumentation he has created fuses technique and technology into a full-body musical system, playable with hands, arms, mouth and body.

As he says:
I am what can only be described as a cyborg musician. in other words, the music i create live, can not be replicated without technology. My music is called "Beatjazz." It is a mix of sound design, live looping and jazz improvisation. My instrument of choice over the years has been a Yamaha Wind MIDI controller, but now the limitations have started to stunt the growth of this new form, so i designed an instrument that can take it into future.

He is now working on the next iteration of his instrument, codenamed Tron, and built around a helmet-mounted controller.

Onyx Ashanti on the Web

Twitter: @onyxashanti
Blog: beatjazz.blogspot.com

Friday, July 08, 2011

STEPHEN FRY



I first became aware of Stephen Fry from a British friend who told me I should follow him on twitter. I did - and occasionally I would be amused by something he said - but I never really looked deeply into his life/work. Then another friend from Sweden posted this on FB (all these connected ways of learning from like minded people) and I had to post this here. I love his ideas about music - and especially this idea of a concerto being a conversation between the individual and the state. It made me immediately go to itunes and create a "concerto playlist" and start listening.

Thursday, July 07, 2011

James Baldwin





Absolutely one of the most brilliant and prophetic writers ever...witness...survivor. I've been about him for the past few years....and I just can't get enough of his wisdom, his wit and his unflagging love.

(Broadside by Patrick Sharrow)

Lake Michigan is a Dangerous Body of Water

At least the southern half is...such a pity.

Each one teach one....

I have been teaching long enough now that when I see former students giving the same advice that I give in the classroom....well - big internal smiles. Not that I take any credit for their wonderfulness - but love that I have had the honor of working with them for part of their / our journey.


wants to remind the young people of facebook not to post anything you wouldn't want a current/future employer to read/see, or to change your privacy settings to "friends only".
35 minutes ago · ·
  • 2 people like this.
    • Kimberly Weiss ‎(sounding like a representative from reputations.com)
      34 minutes ago ·
    • Amy Soczka I second that! Don't post anything you wouldn't want your grandma or future employer to see...
      32 minutes ago · · 1 person
    • Leslie Fedorchuk love that you say this....because you sound like me. I always try to impress it in every class I teach..it really can be detrimental to future possibilities. (might have to post this on my blog) ♥
      about a minute ago ·

Wednesday, July 06, 2011