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Sunday, November 17, 2024
Deicing and Enchanting Clouds On Flight South
Saturday, March 09, 2024
Coming Home On Part 1: Leaving Bainbridge
Time had come to bid our daughter's family goodbye for now. I was taken aback by the price of Seattle-Anchorage tickets when I was booking our flight home. I don't remember the details, but I just remember the 10 am flight was higher than normal and the later flights were even worse.
Problem is we start off from Bainbridge Island. That means you have a 35 minute ferry ride to downtown Seattle. Then either a walk to the light rail and to the airport, or get a cab. Cabs are $40 plus tip. Light rail, for seniors, is $1 each. So if there's time and it's not raining hard, we go light rail.
This winter my daughter warned me about delays with the ferries and some ferries getting cancelled meaning you have to wait 50 minutes or more for the next one. There were some problems with the ferries themselves, but mostly it's a staffing issue. Lots of retirees recently and new people need special training and aren't as experienced.
I even signed up for notifications when there was a delay or cancellation on the Seattle-Bainbridge ferry. This was helpful to get a sense of how often there were delays and cancellations. I got fewer alerts as time went by and there were far fewer cancellations.
But that makes planning a trip to the airport a real pain. Especially when I think of the 10 minutes it takes to get to the Anchorage airport from our house. An 8am flight means getting up really early and hoping your ferry is close to on time.
On the Bainbridge Ferry page there's a link to get text message alerts on the left. And a cool link is a real time map of where the ferries are - usually there are two ferries going between Bainbridge and Seattle.
You can see the Tacoma is coming from Bainbridge to Seattle and the Chimacum is in the opposite direction. There's also one coming toward Seattle from Bremerton.
Friday, January 26, 2024
Seattle Outing - Food And Art
Our grand parenting duties shrink back as our granddaughter gets older and has more autonomy and more activities to fill up her time. That's not a bad thing. We still get to spend lots of time with our daughter and granddaughter, but I also have plenty of time to read, think, write, and delete emails that never seem to slow down. Even as I unsubscribe to emailers I never subscribed to, new ones seem to find me.
But we had an anniversary yesterday and we decided to take the ferry and wander around downtown Seattle.It's been pretty rainy, but the sun made itself known as we approached the ferry terminal.
We tried the post office on 1st Street, but it was closed for lunch.
So we made our way to Pike Place Market for some clam chowder. The seats weren't that comfy, but the chowder was hot and the guy with the red sleeves kept up a constant entertaining chatter.
"The French nobleman Charles d'Amboise became the governor of the Duchy of Milan after it was conquered by France. The collar of scallop shells and knots denotes the Order of SaintMichael, granted to him about 1505, perhaps the occasion for commissioning this portrait.
D'Amboise was a friend and patron of Leonardo da Vinci, but he hired a more conservative artist for his portrait and chose to be portrayed in a classic profile view, which records his features but provides no psychological insight. He most likely wanted to link his image with the great rulers of the ancient past, depicted in side views on coins and medals like those shown in the case nearby D'Ambroise himself was an avid coin collector as he proudly demonstrates here."
"Eros and Psyche appear in Greek art as early as the 4th century BC"
The curator wrote the following to accompany this painting:
"The jealous goddess Venus sent her son Cupid to make Psyche fall in love with a horrible monster. Instead, Cupid became enamored himself and installed Psyche in a palace where he visited her at night so that she couldn't learn his identity. One night she stole a peek at his beautiful face. Startled awake, Cupid left immediately, and his palace vanished. Psyche wandered the earth search for her lover, performing impossible tasks set by Venus in hopes of winning him back. Finally, Jupiter intervened: he made Psyche a goddess and reunited her with Cupid, giving their story a happy ending. Here Cupid has just abandoned Psyche, who chases him as he hovers out of reach. This moment allows Colombel, a French artist who was trained in Rome, to show the Roman countryside - the appropriate setting for this classical myth."
So this story goes back 2500 years, yet we have the same human emotions and conflicts: a woman possibly falling in love with a monster (how many battered wives are there today?); a forbidden young love; a jealous and vengeful mother-in-law (no they aren't married, but Venus was Cupid's mother). I'm not sure why the curator thinks the Roman woods to be the appropriate background, perhaps because the Romans appropriated much of Greek culture including their myths.
I knew from the beginning this post was going to be much too long, so let me jump to another exhibit - this of Ausralian aboriginal artists.
These large detailed paintings speak to me in a language I can't identify. They tell stories of people and worlds I do not know. Yet they move me a great deal. This is a beauty and a visual language that still exists, outside of Western culture.
"Lightning bolts that ignite the sky are the source for this striking white maze. Kalipinypa is an important site where ancestral forces swept in with a huge storm that caused lightning to flash and water to rush across the country. They left behind a rock hole surrounded with sandhills that are seen here as vibrant patterns created by dotting that fuses into lines that wiggle ever so slightly. Elizabeth Marks Nakamara was married to the renowned artist Mick Namarari. She watched his painting for years but did not begin to paint herself until after his death in 1998."
"'Dreaming is an all-embracing concept that provides rules for living, a moral code, as well as rules for interacting withthenatural environment' - Jeannie Herbert Nungwarrayi(Walpiri speaker) 2000Dreaming is known by Pintupi speakers as Tjukurrpa. Tjukurrpa is called a template for a dynamic duty or way of observing laws passed down by ancestors - the powerful shape-shifting creators who formulated the earth's features, people, and culture. Dreamings stimulate intellectual and emotional life, as people recall extensive genealogies and ceremonial song cycles that describe the ancestors' adventures. No country - the lands, waters, flora, and fauna of an area - is without a trail of their presence, which offers a living continuum of wisdom for all to learn from.Dotting was a biodegradable at for for centuries - on ceremonial objects, in sand paintings, and on painted and adorned bodies. Dots of ochres, down, feathers, and leaves could at times totally overcome a human form, enabling dancers to enter a mythic envelope as they enacted ceremonies. Dots began appearing in painting as a echo of this sacred significance. Some contend they help conceal sacred knowledge, and others suggest they express the flash of ancestral power.'
Monday, January 23, 2023
Harbor Walk And A South African Lawyer
Yesterday I took a walk down to the harbor here on Bainbridge Island.
And on my way back I did a double take when I saw this fairly mature palm tree. Don't see a lot of them as far north as Seattle. But All About Palm Trees tells there are some:
Palm Trees In Washington
There are specific varieties of cold hardy palm trees that can survive zones 8 and 9 of Washington state. Here are palm trees that can live in Washington:
California Fan Palm Tree – Zones 8b - 11 (15 to 20 F)
Canary Island Date Palm Tree – Zones 8b - 11 (15 to 20 F)
Chinese Fan Palm Tree – Zones 8a – 11 (10 to 15 F)
True Date Palm Tree – Zones 8b - 11 (15 to 20 F)
European Fan Palm Tree – Zones 7b – 11 (5 to 10 F)
Mexican Fan Palm Tree – Zones 8b - 11 (15 to 20 F)
Queen Palm Tree – Zones 8b - 11 (15 to 20 F)
Saw Palmetto Palm Tree – Zones 7a - 11 (0 to 5 F)
"She's not so far advanced in matters of the spirit not to recognize the sound of a rare opportunity clearing its throat.""The lawyer has amplified over the years, in harmony with her burgeoning practice. Consumed two husbands along the way and still lazily digesting then. like a python in hibernation."
Monday, November 28, 2022
Cancelled Wiz Leads To Seattle's Pacific Science Center
The Wiz was not high on my todo list. It wasn't even on my todo list. But when invited to accompany my daughter and granddaughter to see the Wiz, I, of course, said yes!
The ferry into Seattle was jammed with Seahawks fans.
We made our way to the Art Museum restaurant for lunch and while eating my daughter got a voice mail saying that the afternoon performance of The wiz wasn't. An hour before the show we learn it was cancelled? That's even more bewildering because looking on line today I find this at the 5th Avenue Theater site:
"Masks will be encouraged but optional for audience members at The 5th for performances of The Wiz. We strongly recommend and encourage the wearing of highly effective masks such as N95, KN95, or KF94. Please CLICK HERE for further details.
Please note, the performances of The Wiz on November 19, 20 and 27 matinee have been canceled."
If the matinee was cancelled last weekend, why didn't they notify us sooner? (I suggested to my daughter that they hadn't sold enough tickets and she responded that they'd been sold out.)
Oh well. Flexibility.
The Pacific Science Center at the site of the 1962 Seattle World's Fair was my granddaughter's immediate alternative destination. That meant a short rail ride to the monorail, then the monorail to the Space Needle.
A walk over to the Science Center and to the laser show.
I was underwhelmed. I expected a laser show in 2022 to be more than lots of moving squiggles and primitive cartoons backed with lame electronic music. (Note: I like good electronic music.)
A long and busy day with two of my favorite people.
Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Stepping Back In Time
Flying from Anchorage to Seattle in October is like stepping back in time. The flowers are still blooming profusely and it's light at 7am.
The last two days, J managed to get out of bed early enough to walk our granddaughter to school. Today she got to sleep in while I was up at 6:45am.
Once getting out of bed is accomplished, it is pure pleasure to walk with Z to school.
Saturday, July 23, 2022
Back Home - Random Bits
TSA & Masks
When we left Anchorage last week, NONE of the TSA people at the Anchorage Airport was wearing a mask. When we left Seattle last night, EVERY TSA worker was wearing a mask. Not sure what that means. Is the difference the location? Is the difference the timing? Don't know.
Blogging Post Ideas I'm Thinking About
- What does 'privilege' mean? How is it different from a right? Are there factors that deserve 'privilege' or does it then become something other than a privilege? When if privilege legitimate, when not? How does the nature of the person/organization that grants privilege make a difference? Lots to explore here. I think because people have started using 'privilege' in new ways, so the original meaning is being distorted. Does/should intelligence give one privilege? Money? Force? If so, when and how?
- When does talking about ending democracy move from free speech rights to treason? Does advocacy of taking way other people's rights a legitimate form of free speech? If yes, are there any limits? If no, why not?
- The Christian brand. To my knowledge, there's no trademark or copyright protection for terms relating to Christianity*. This has led to people with widely differing beliefs and behaviors claiming to be Christian. I would argue that the Christian brand has been appropriated by various people and groups, whose words and actions are contrary to what 'true Christians' believe. Think about the people in the United States who claim to be Christian - church leaders and followers, politicians, judges, business owners - who claim to be "Christian" yet behave in ways that are very different from commonly believed Christian values such as
Some of the main themes that Jesus taught, which Christians later embraced, include:
- Love God.
- Love your neighbor as yourself.
- Forgive others who have wronged you.
- Love your enemies.
- Ask God for forgiveness of your sins.
- Jesus is the Messiah and was given the authority to forgive others.
- Repentance of sins is essential.
- Don’t be hypocritical.
- Don’t judge others.
- The Kingdom of God is near. It’s not the rich and powerful—but the weak and poor—who will inherit this kingdom. (From History.com)
If there were a trademark for Christianity that was held by people whose behavior followed these beliefs, could sue people who claim to be Christians but who don't behave as Christians.
*There is legal advice available for how and when Churches can get Trademark protection. But would suing a Ted Cruz or a Mitch McConnell itself be a Christian thing to do? Probably more so than telling your followers to vote for them.
- What is a reasonable amount of money for a redistricting board to spend? Redistricting is mandated by the US Constitution (Sec 1, Art 2) and by state constitutions (see, for example, Alaska Constitution Article 6). But how much should it cost? Does anyone care? Who's keeping track? What are the incentives to save or to spend?
Monday, March 07, 2022
Bainbridge Island Supports People Of Ukraine
Sunday I joined my daughter and about 100 other folks from the island in a short procession and quiet rally for the people of Ukraine. It was organized by the Interfaith Council. Some pictures.
We're about to board a plane back to Anchorage. Looking forward to a second spring, but it could be a while.