Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Pat Metheny on Kenny G: Follow Up

I posted   Pat Metheny's comments on Kenny G here a while back.  I get a lot of hits for that post and  someone googled "kenny g on pat metheny's remarks.'  So in the interest of fair play, I thought I'd see what, if anything, Kenny G had to say.  My personal opinion is, he's probably better off not saying anything.  Let his record sales do the talking.  If there were to be a response, better have some other person do it.

I haven't found any comments from Kenny G.  But I did find this follow up comment [it looks reasonably authentic, though I haven't analyzed it word for word to see if the style is just like the original] from Pat Metheny (and it's from way back in June) on his surprise at how his comments on a small music forum with a tiny audience got splashed across the internet.  It's a bit long and could use some editing, but I think this paragraph from jazzguitar.com is the most useful:
One last thing - it is a little alarming to me to see that my little rant on this topic seems to have generated such a relatively huge response. it makes me feel that in this day and age, even within the "jazz community", controversy, especially PUBLIC controversy, has the chance to "win" over musical substance, even in terms of what gets discussed - people seem to absolutely love it. I have seen (and have never dug) at least one of my peers banking on this for a few years now with his public pronouncements and I have to admit that I underestimated the impact/interest that a "negative" public comment even on an obscure corner of the web can manifest. I guess I wish that the actual playing and writing could generate the kind of discussion that what was essentially an off the cuff cultural/political blurb into cyberspace seemed to. again, it seems more practicing and better music needs to be involved - gonna continue to work hard on that (finding the good notes) as a goal.
I thought about just making this an update on the other post, but I suspect not too many of you were planning on revisiting that post.  I'd also note that the comment above is from the year 2000, so this debate really lives on.


Here is a forum that was begun by a Kenny G fan after a concert.  When I copied this I hid the remarks by the Metheny fan (I've covered that already) but I mention it here so you know what they are reacting to. 

SteveG
Newcomer

Posted 19 December 2009 09:45 AM
RE: Link

An amazing performance! Of course 2nd row seats in the pit helped. Great when you take advantage of presale announcements for tickets!

Kenny G Concert December 18, 2009

Posts: 13 | Registered: 12 February 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post

Regular

Posted 19 December 2009 10:16 AM Hide Post
This guy really knows his craft! Beautiful music.

Posts: 50 | Registered: 14 December 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post

Ignored post by a true voice posted 19 December 2009 10:33 AM Show Post

Ignored post by a true voice posted 19 December 2009 02:31 PM Show Post



\




Newcomer

Posted 20 December 2009 06:46 AM Hide Post
Voice

You are an idiot. Everyone is entitled to an opinion; but you are still an idiot. Kenny G is the best saxophonist on the planet. Period! Pat WHO? Never heard of him. Thousands of others who were at the concert would agree! MORON!

Posts: 13 | Registered: 21 June 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post


Hall of Famer

Posted 20 December 2009 12:46 PM Hide Post
While I have no "dog in the hunt" so to speak, for Catwoman to say, "Pat WHO? Never heard of him" shows her ignorance of the Jazz genre.

She may be a fan of pop music, but she certainly doesn't know jazz and actually makes Matheny's point with her post.

Posts: 282 | Registered: 07 July 2006


And apparently someone thinks there are enough Kenny G fans in Anchorage to bring him up to the Dena'ina Center on August 18.  But $84-106?  For Kenny G?  I thought we were in a recession and that half of the US was in credit card debt.  You think everyone buying tickets is in the black on their credit cards? No?  But they can can fork over $84 to hear Kenny G. live?  Scary.  [I did find a discount ticket site that has tickets for $82.  But really, those of you who are paying 20% interest on your credit card debt, use the money to pay off the principle, and ride your bike during the concert.]

I guess I posted the Pat Metheny piece because I had been trying to figure out why I am so negative about Kenny G. Metheny had a lot more reasons than I could ever have articulated. At least all the Kenny G fans will be off the streets for an hour or two that night. (You know I'm just teasing you.  It's good that different people like different things. I'm sure there are even people I know and like who will be at that concert. Just don't tell me ok?)

Monday, August 02, 2010

Discussing David Copperfield in Hope



The monthly book club meeting this month was at a member's home in Hope.  I only joined this group a year ago, so a relaxing weekend in Hope meant lots of time to talk and get to know more about the members I don't really know very well.  It also turned out that our host's wife in in the book club that my wife has been in for several years. 
The weather cooperated and we spent a lot of time on the deck, surrounded by bushes, trees, and a vegetable plot.  J and his wife began their Hope life (they mainly live in Anchorage) in the 70s and have added plots over the years and there are now a number of buildings - house, outhouse, storage sheds, wood shop, and even shared ownership of a sawmill.  While the original house was built for them, they have built most of the other buildings themselves.  They've recently acquired electricity, but the water comes from a well and there's no bathroom. 


 They've been watching a merlin family that nested nearby this summer.  We also saw a merlin last weekend in Bootlegger's Cover while on the garden tour.  These are small falcons eat small rodents and J said the swallow population is gone since the merlin's moved in.  


The mosquitoes weren't a problem at the house, but when we walked to the main street in the evening there were lots of mosquitoes flying over this puddle in the road. 

Discussing David Copperfield in the setting was rather interesting, because we also heard about the closeness of the community in Hope over the years, but also the feuds that are here too.  It was very similar to many of the stories in Copperfield. 

We had some attorneys so I read aloud a portion from the book, where David is writing with his new boss at the court system where he is apprenticing.  David asks his boss
. . . what he considered the best sort of professional business.  He replied, that a good case of a disputed will, where there was a neat little estate of thirty or forty thousand pounds, was perhaps, the best of all.  In such a case, he said, not only were there very pretty pickings, in the way of arguments at every stage of the proceedings, and mountains upon mountains of evidence on interrogatory and counter-interrogatory (to say nothing of an appeal lying, first to the Delegates, and then to the Lords); but, the costs being pretty sure to come out of the estate at last, both sides went at it in a lively and spirited manner, and expense was no consideration. 
One of the attorneys said he'd just turned down a will case the previous day and he knew of a case where, when it was all over, the only people with money were the attorneys.

Another thing we all noticed was the indirect way people speak.  It takes a while to figure out exactly what someone is saying.   It did occur to me that some of the masked speech is made by people of the lower classes, and in part, they speak like this because they are not really allowed to say what they think directly.  They have to hide it so that it seems that they are completely agreeing rather than challenging.  Here's Uriah Heep, talking to Copperfield about how he has moved up in station because his boss has not been taking care of his accounts.  Copperfield believes that Heep himself has been creating these problems himself.

"Oh! Yes, truly,"  said Uriah.  "Ah! great imprudence, Master Copperfield.  It's a topic that I wouldn't touch upon to any soul but you.  Even to you I can ony touch upon it, and no more.  If any one else had been in my place during the last few years, by this time he would have had Mr. Wickfield (oh, what a worthy man he is, Master Copperfield, too!) under his thumb.  Un-der-his thumb," said Uriah, very slowly, as he stretched out his cruel-looking hand above my table, and pressed his thumb down under it, until it shook, and shook the room.  .  .

"Oh dear, yes, Master Copperfield,"  he proceeded, in a soft voice, most remarkably contrasting with the action of his thumb, which did not diminish its hard pressure in the least degree;  "there's no doubt of it.  There would have been loss, disgrace.  I don't know what all.  Mr Wickfield knows it.  I am the umble instrument of umbly serving him:  and he puts me on an eminence I hardly could have hoped to reach  How thankful I should be!" 
It's really hard to pick out examples like this, because there is sooo much verbiage like this to wade through.  So much repetition.  Another person who puts her self down constantly as she pushes over the line of what might then have been considered further than she should go is a woman living with David's school friend Steerforth. 
"You have been a long time,"  she said, "without coming here.  Is your profession really so engaging and interesting as to absorb your whole attention?  I ask, because I always want to be informed when I am ignorant  Is it really, though?"

I replied that I like it well enough, but that I certainly could not claim so much for it.

"Oh! I am glad to know that, because I always like to be put right when I am wrong,"  said Rosa Dartle.  "You mean it is a little dry, perhaps?"
This sort of language makes Copperfield a bit of a challenge to plod through.  In his day, people were probably more used to it, plus, they read it in the newspaper in serial form.




I had never seen Hope so crowded.  There were people at the Seaview, music coming out from someone singing on the deck, and the parking lot at the end was totally full of campers.  Our host said that the pinks were running and so people were here.  We were told that Melissa Mitchell was singing that night.  A van did pull up and musicians got out.  I'm not sure if this is her or not.  I've looked online for pictures, but it's too hard to tell for sure, but after listening to her singing on the computer, I realize we should have stayed.  But we had a book to discuss. 




All in all, it was a very nice weekend. 

Resurrection Trail Flowers, Mushrooms, Bugs Near Hope

My book club met this weekend in Hope.  I'll post on that later, but on the way home I checked out the first mile and a half of the Resurrection Trail which I haven't been on for years.  Here are some of the things I saw.





As much as I encourage biking, I'm not amused by bikes that leave ruts on trails.  Even without bikes here, there are muddy spots.  But the bikes make it much worse. 

Monk's Hood






I'm assuming this is a type of puffball. 



Devil's Club




Some sort of fly on the tiny yarrow flowers.





Do I need to say this is a fireweed flower?  Well, not everyone knows.


And here's my dirty windshield with Alaska in the background.  
Headed north toward Portage.  There wasn't a lot of blue, but some.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Biking Perks

There aren't a lot of biking perks beyond the intrinsic benefits - the exercise, the fresh air, seeing more because you're going slower, being able to easily stop and say hi to friends and strangers, and knowing you're saving gas and not polluting, to name a few.  There are nice bike trails through the woods and more bike racks here and there, but mostly bikes are an afterthought and cars are the first thought.  For instance, there's construction on 36th and this sign for car drivers is put right in the middle of the sidewalk in the way of any cyclist trying to keep out of cars' way by staying out of the street.  Pedestrians and cyclists really don't matter to these folks.  Not only do are they blocking the road - necessarily I'm assuming to do the work - but they are blocking the sidewalk clearly unnecessarily because they just don't consider people on the sidewalks. 

But there are perks.  As I rode to the courthouse on Friday, a group of people were near the path waving for me to stop.  I assumed there must be a moose on the path, but no, the Bicycle Commuters of Anchorage were serving free coffee and muffins to people commuting to work by bike. 

Friday, July 30, 2010

Euphemism Alert!! What the hell is "Lack of Situational Awareness"?

An AP story by Becky Bohrer in Thursday's ADN on an internal Alyeska Pipeline report repeatedly featured the term 'situational awareness.' This was not a term I'd heard before.

Merriam Webster's online dictionary defines a euphemism as:
the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expression for one that may offend or suggest something unpleasant.
So what was the unpleasant or offensive term they were avoiding?  Let's see if we can tell from the context.     
The operator of the 800-mile trans-Alaska pipeline system said Wednesday that an internal company review found that power failure and lack of "situational awareness" contributed to a contained oil spill in May. . .

At least Bohrer had the good sense to put quotes around the term if only this first time.  So, an oil spill was caused by
  1. a power outage and 
  2. lack of situational awareness. 
Hmmm, it sounds innocuous enough, except that they blame it in part for the spill. And they're using this euphemism because the true words wouldn't sound too good. 

[Michelle] Egan [a spokeswoman for Alyeska Pipeline Service Co.] said that lessons learned, including a need for greater situational awareness, are being put into practice during scheduled maintenance shutdowns of the line this summer.
But how can you have more of it if you don't know what it is?  And shouldn't they be doing this all the time, not just for scheduled maintenance shutdowns?

But she said another big issue was that workers were so focused on restoring power, they "didn't have the situational awareness to anticipate the tank filling and overflowing."
So, they should have anticipated - thought ahead, been prepared, paid attention, planned. I'd guess this can be interpreted as, "while everyone was trying to get the power on, no one was paying attention to what else was happening." Or possibly even, "Everyone was running around like chickens with their heads cut off."

I know that in emergency planning you're supposed to anticipate all the things that can go wrong and at the very least, have a plan for what each member of the response team is going to be responsible for.  Doesn't sound like any of that happened.   


Then there were a couple of uses of the word 'aware' by itself.
The company has taken steps to avoid a repeat in the future, she said, making workers aware of the need to be cognizant of their surroundings -- and possible, or likely, situations that may arise -- and having plans for specific training. The lessons are already being put into practice, she said.
Wikipedia defines cognizant as, (are you ready?) 'aware.'  So basically this says,  "making workers aware of the need to be aware." (To be fair, Merriam-Webster's online dictionary defines it as "knowledgeable of something especially through personal experience; mindful"  BUT they give the synonym as 'aware.')

So, is she saying that Alyeska now has plans for specific training, but didn't in the past?  All these years and they didn't have training for things like this?  Gives you a lot of confidence in the private sector doesn't it?  We really need to shrink government so the private sector can do its thing. (Sorry, couldn't help myself there.)
During the first scheduled maintenance shutdown of the summer season, she said, there was an extra person in the control room whose sole purpose was to monitor the entire system -- staying out of the maintenance work at hand to be aware of what else might be going on.
So, are they saying here that when the spill happened no one was in charge?  No one was keeping track of the bigger picture?


At What Do I Know? we strive to always be situationally aware, though we've never described it as such.  Basically we've talked about paying attention or looking at the bigger picture.   When I was a Boy Scout it was being prepared.

And, of course, I wouldn't be doing my job here if I didn't check out whether others have used this term.  Wikipedia assures us that they have.
Situation awareness, or SA, is the perception of environmental elements within a volume of time and space, the comprehension of their meaning, and the projection of their status in the near future. It is also a field of study concerned with perception of the environment critical to decision-makers in complex, dynamic areas from aviation, air traffic control, power plant operations, military command and control, and emergency services such as fire fighting and policing; to more ordinary but nevertheless complex tasks such as driving an automobile or motorcycle.              [I added the emphasis at the end because most people couldn't possibly make it through the whole quote awake.]
One way that consultants make money is by creating new names for old practices.  That way they can call themselves, say, "Situational Awareness" experts and charge a lot of money for something that people should already know and be doing.

After all,  did you have situational awareness training before you got your driver's license? (Yes, go back and look at the end of the last quote if this doesn't make sense.) Actually, if you had decent drivers training  and read the drivers manual, you had the equivalent of what they are calling situational awareness training. (Drivers ed was a required class when I was in high school and there was an additional two week class where we actually drove around on the streets, including on the freeway.)


The Wikipedia definition hasn't been checked for neutrality and some of the comments on the Wikipedia talk site on SA echo my comments about this being old wine in a new bottle:
Situational awareness has been a preoccupation of performance improvement mthodologies [sic] for more than 2000 years (that we know of). It has been viewed as the core and basis of full and effective functioning.
 One of the deepest logical critiques of "SA" is that it is unnecessary. The philosopher Daniel Dennett might call it "folk psychology," meaning that it is a repackaging of existing concepts under a new name, one that just happens to resonate with "the folk" within a given domain (e.g., the military). To Dennett, this is fine, as long as "the folk" clearly understand that a given term is being used as a proxy for a preexisting set of understandings. . .
A second, equally weighty critique states that "SA" can never truly be objectively defined. In the terminology of MacCorquodale and Meehl, it is a hypothetical construct" that is being inappropriately elevated to the status of an "intervening variable". An example of an intervening variable is voltage, which can be directly measured by a voltmeter. No such "SA meter" exists, or is likely to ever exist. Yet, SA is widely touted as being objectively measurable, e.g., by paper-and-pencil testing. Of course, the same argument can be made of other concepts (e.g., IQ). The difference would be the extent of research which has gone into the latter, versus the former.PrairieOjibway (talk) 01:20, 23 March 2009 (UTC)
Stratfor.com - what appears to be a consulting firm that specializes in SA for international affairs - discusses SA.  Included is this piece which gives us a clue to what lack of SA might be and why Alyeska might want to find a euphemism:
An important element of this mindset is first coming to the realization that a threat exists. Ignorance or denial of a threat — or completely tuning out to one’s surroundings while in a public place — makes a person’s chances of quickly recognizing the threat and avoiding it slim to none. This is why apathy, denial and complacency are so deadly. [emphasis added]

So, essentially, Alyeska's "lack of situational awareness" means that through apathy, denial, complacency, lack of planning, and lack of leadership they totally screwed up.  It was important enough that they mentioned it in their not-for-public-consumption review of the spill, but they needed a much more genteel way of saying  "we fucked up." 

Note for my readers who expect this blog to use only family friendly language.  Sometimes there is no other word that conveys the meaning intended.  Then, and only then, do I use it.  If anyone has a better term, let me know.

Weyhrauch Hearing Vacates September Trial Date

U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska
Court Calendar for Friday, July 30, 2010
8:00 AM 3:07-cr-00056-02-JWS Judge Sedwick ANCHORAGE COURTROOM 3
USA vs. BRUCE WEYHRAUCH*
(Karen Loeffler) (Douglas Pope)
(Kevin Feldis) (Ray R. Brown)
(James M. Trusty)
(Kevin R. Gingras)
(M. Kendall Day
(Marc Elliot Levin)



(Peter M. Koski)
STATUS CONFERENCE

8:02 am 

Opened.

Judge Sedwick:  Has SC mandate been issued?  When due?  What do you think 9th circuit to rule?

Kendall Day (Prosecutor):  [Began explaining the issues and was interrupted by Judge
Sedwick, "I just asked if you knew when, not the issues.  And Day said he didn't know.]

Douglas Pope (Weyhrauch's attorney):  A couple of months, minimum.  Who knows but 2 months minimum and then there could be a petition for rehearing.

Sedwick:  I think minimum of 6 weeks, plus. . .  I don't know that we can meet in September.  Not worth meeting until 9th Circuit rules.


Day:  The court will be  able to proceed more expeditiously if some of the ancillary issues are resolved before.

Sedwick:  I'm sure you can work things out beforehand.  My order for this morning is Sept. 13th date is vacated and will set a date as soon as possible.



The courtroom was pretty much empty.  There were three other media folks, Rick Smith's attorney (or so I was told but I didn't recognize him), and then a man and a woman who turned out to be FBI agents who sat with the Prosecutor.  I was trying to match the names on the court list - I knew Karen Loefler wasn't there - with the people at the Prosecutor's table and couldn't.  So after I went up to the man and woman who'd been sitting with the prosecutor and introduced myself as a blogger and asked who they each were.  The man responded with mild derision in his voice, "I'm not telling a blogger who I am.  Ask the attorney."

I introduced myself to the attorney who identified himself, very politely, as Kendall Day and the other two as FBI agents.  I normally wouldn't put this sort of trivia down. On the surface, it wasn't a big deal, but it seems to me that FBI agents should treat people politely, as individuals not as members of a class, until they have justification to act otherwise.

Maybe we should create a new term here:  media profiling. 

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Interesting Google Searches

I haven't done a post on interesting (strange?) google searches for a while. I got too busy with other things to keep up with them. But once in a while a saw one I felt the need to capture for posterity. So, here they are.

skype sex during deployment - - went to a post on a legislative committee talking about child custody during deployment which mentioned skype as a way deployed military could talk to their kids.

can you buy prostitutes at the ch2m man camp in north slope alaska - This man (I know, I'm assuming again) got to a post about CH2M Hill Corruption in Ohio.  Probably he meant a different kind of prostitute.



what do americans call rape seed -

This one was a perfect bull's eye. It went to a post called, are you ready, "What Do Americans call rapeseed?" 



outer space tables fastende to the grround I'm afraid I didn't note where this one ended up. Anyone want to take a shot at what he was after?


what to do in a day to be an interesting person - this got to a post called Interesting People and Events at UAA. I hope it was helpful, but don't know it was what this person from New Zealand was looking for.

black and tan flesh eating beetles- Last time I did a Search post like this I had along list of different ways people got to the post Tiny Black Bugs -  Fruit Flies or Fungus Gnats?  But none were as colorful as this one.  I also have lots of hits that go to  Brown Bug. It would seem a lot of people are experiencing the natural world in the form of bugs.


what can i send in the mail to my husband in alaska 2010 - This one just got to the blog, no special post. Don't think she found what she was looking for.

steven nannas arms guns manufacture
- I think Google is trying too hard to have hits. What Do I Know? comes up #1 out of 45,000 hits, with this:

What Do I Know?
Apr 15, 2010 ... I apologize Steve. I was lost in the moment and am trying to get a grip on myself as .... NANA/TECK Contract Lobbyist; annual fee $20000.00 ...
whatdoino-steve.blogspot.com/ - 9 hours ago - Similar
This is pretty slim pickins. Why even bother?


how much money do you get for setting up residency in alaska
- This New Zealand based surfer got to a post on this year's PFD application deadline.  Others have asked the same question. 

parkinson's disease billboard omaha -  This went to a picture from a post about a fire prevention billboard in Thailand.  Not exactly what the searcher was looking for.  So why did this post show up? Because I have a link to a Parkinsons blog and some posts about Omaha. So I had all the words somewhere on the blog.  Just not in one post.  But this was an image search, so the person must have clicked to enlarge the photo.  Probably because it was too small to read and he thought it might be about Parkinsons and in Omaha.  By the way, google's new image search results are a huge improvement over the old way. 


who is the old bald guy with black glasses that soes sis flags commercils? - This person got to a post on Jehovah's Witnesses.  

what does 38 one hundredths look like How about 38/100?  But instead they got Claude Lévi-Strauss One Hundredth Anniversary. 




For the record, I had the  first visitor that I've noticed the other day from Bhutan.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Sorry, I'm Thinking Rather than Blogging

It seems I could post something of interest here at least daily.  But I'm having trouble posting.  I've decided it's because I have other projects which require the sort of thinking that normally goes into blogging.  Which made me realize how much thinking time I put into blogging.  It became obvious when I started posts, but don't finish them because they need more work but I need that time for other things I've committed to do.

For example,  I'm reviewing a manuscript for a journal.  I've got other personal housekeeping issues that need attention.  (I'm not talking about things like the howling pipes we've been hearing in the house at strange times.  The plumber came this morning and wasn't sure - he never got to hear it - but there was a faucet that wasn't supposed to be closed down and so maybe that was the cause.  We'll see.)  And some volunteer work to organize that isn't too difficult, but does require some concentrated thinking time.

How much time do you spend really thinking?  Not reading the product of someone else's  thinking, but pushing past your habitual stories about how the world works until you see patterns or meaning that eluded you before?  That change how you understand something, and perhaps even how you will behave? 

You simply can't do that when you are interrupted every few minutes by messages, calls, children, the radio talking, etc.  It requires finding a space where you are cut off from the rest of the world and just sit and concentrate and work through things.  What hideouts do you have where you can think? 

When I go for a run, my brain gets freed to sort through all the junk that's accumulated.  Unplugging my computer and finding another spot to write is another way I can block out normal interruptions.  It helps if there is no wifi available, but just being unplugged and somewhere different is good enough.  Knowing that the battery is running down so I have to stay on task is helpful. 

So, back to the manuscript.  My comments are due today, though I did tell them I needed a little more time when I accepted the assignment. 


Shut off your computer and think.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Dreaming Through Inception

I'd overheard a bit of Dicaprio talking about Inception - something about knowing what is real and what isn't.  Then a friend strongly recommended the movie, especially considering that this blog sometimes addresses the question What is Real?  

We saw it last night and I didn't think I'd post about it since its treatment of what is real seemed pretty superficial.  This was not the Matrix by any stretch.  But today there are a couple of NY Times articles on nightmares. (Guiding Your Sleep While You’re Awake
and Following a Script to Change a Nightmare).  The movie Inception mostly takes place in people's dreams and  both pre-dream guiding goes on and in dream script following occurs.

The movie is NOT a must see I'm afraid.  It carried on its conceits far longer than I needed and managed to slip in various cliche Hollywood action such as car chases and explosions.  The main idea was slim and lots of suspension of disbelief is required.  There's also a fair amount of head scratching.

That said, it did engage me to the extent that when we walked for dinner afterward we did continue discussing the movie and its various feints and sleights, and  made lame jokes about what level of dreaming we were currently in. But ultimately none of us felt we'd gotten any great insights and we agreed it went on far too long.

The two New York Times articles linked above are much more worth one's time if you want to know something about dreaming and they both also reference the movie Inception. 

If you got this far, you'll notice I gave virtually nothing away, nor did the movie inspire me to pursue some theme or idea raised.  Despite the hype, this is Hollywood entertainment, not the kind of movie that raises important issues.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Anchorage Garden Club Annual Tour Glimpse





Today was the Anchorage Garden Club's tour of gardens.  This is always a chance to get new ideas, but most importantly a not so gentle reminder to get working in the garden.  There's always at least one garden that makes it all worthwhile.  This time there were a number of gardens that I enjoyed. 

I think this first one was my favorite because of an overall combination of things:  probably the widest variety of plants; a number of spectacular individual flowers; while only about three years old, it looked fairly established;  names of many of the plants.



Look at how amazing the flowers are.  The first two are both red bee balm.








I think the bright red splashes in this second picture come out of those little buds in the previous picture.  This second plant is a further along. 














Artichoke






Dinner Plate Dahlia





Dinner Plate Dahlia Bud Opening




This is Jean Simmons, the gardener responsible for all the flowers above.






Jean's house was the lone South Anchorage location on the tour.  Then we went to see the cluster of four gardens in and around Bootlegger's Cove.




We were told this one is a bristlecone pine. That got our attention. From blueplanetbiomes:
If you could imagine a living tree as old as the pyramids of Egypt, what do you think it would look like? It would look like a bristlecone pine, Pinus longaeva,the oldest known tree species in the world.

The bristlecone pine only lives in scattered, arid mountain regions of six western states of America, but the oldest are found in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest in the White Mountains of California. There the pines exist in an exposed, windswept, harsh environment, free of competition from other plants and the ravages of insects and disease. The oldest bristlecones usually grow at elevations of 10,000 to 11,000 feet.

The oldest known tree is "Methuselah", which is 4,789 years old. . .
 As you can see, it is thriving in Anchorage, and it could have another 4,000 years to live.




I'm a sucker for birch bark and this tree was special.  I should have asked, because I couldn't get a definitive answer online.  Wikipedia lists some 15 North American birch species and 18 European and Asian species.




The bristlecone is the tree in the middle of the photo below, its top reaching the bottom of the big window.  The birch is on the right, and the tall skinny tree on the left is a poplar, I believe she said it was Scandanavian.















The newspaper clearly said to leave dogs and strollers at home.  That makes sense.  But the friend we went with was dog sitting and had the dog in the car.  But there were four houses nearby and we decided to walk around the neighborhood;  we'd just keep the dog out on the sidewalk.  When we got to the house on the left, the owner insisted we could take the Daisy around.   (She had her own dog with her in the driveway.)

As luck would have it, the President of the Garden Club happened to be visiting this garden and saw the dog in the back and let us know dogs and children were not supposed to be there.  (The paper only said strollers, not children.)  We assured her that was our intention, but that the owner insisted we take her rather than have one of us wait with her in front.  The owner didn't even know the President was there.  It was all worked out amiably.  Life is full of little surprises.