Drove down to Girdwood with my daughter and granddaughter in the car.
A stop along the way to check out the Dall sheep above the highway.
In the other direction were the mudflats of Turnagain Arm. (I didn't do any editing of the shot below.)
The Winner Creek trail includes a tram across the river. Here's looking at the next people in line pulling the ropes that got us across the gap.
Someone said there aren't too many of these left in the U.S. And as I was looking up whether there are others, I kept getting sent back to just this one. I did find this 360˚ view of the tram which gives you a much better view than mine. (And for Jeremy, I found this video of Tram D201 hand wired with nine original tram tubes.)
And here's a view of Winner Creek from the tram. The tram was much more primitive when we first pulled our way across, I don't know how many years ago.
From the tram it's a short (really short, sign says .2 miles) walk to the bridge over the Winner Creek gorge. Here's a picture long down creek from the bridge.
And here's looking up the other side where the wide creek is forced into the narrow gorge. Again, from the bridge.
Here it is from a little trail going up the creek a ways.
And since silent, still photos simply cannot do this experience justice, I took a bit of video from this spot to give you a better sense of the glory of this spot, one of my favorites in Alaska. (Which means, of course, in the world.)
And then you can look on down below to see where it goes after the end of the video.
Here's a closer view of one of the rock walls above the water.
Then we took the tram back. It's Independence Day holiday and people have found out about the tram. There were 30 people waiting to get back across. The tram holds two people (we took my granddaughter, but she's a wee thing). It gets hand pulled across the gorge, then hand pulled back. So it was a bit of a wait.
Late lunch at the Bake Shop and dessert at The Ice Cream Shop at what can only be called a strip mall where the Alyeska road meets the Seward Highway. Good day with good friends.
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Tuesday, July 04, 2017
Monday, July 03, 2017
Fireworks Quiz
Here's a quiz for the Fourth of July. I've double checked some of these, but not all, so if any of these answers is important, you better check some more sources. Have a safe, fun holiday. And be politically active so we can celebrate many more Independence Days
1. Fireworks originated in (A)--------- some (B)------- years ago.
A. 1. Japan 2. China 3. Egypt 4. Greece
B. 1. 700 2. 1000 3. 2000 4. 3000
2. Firecrackers originated in (A)________ some (B) ________ years ago.
A. 1. Japan 2. China 3. Egypt 4. Greece
B. 1. 700 2. 1000 3. 2000 4. 3000
3, Which European nation was the first to develop elaborate fireworks displays?
1. Germany 2. Italy 3. France 4. England
4. The first fireworks display in North American colonies took place in
1. 1608 in Jamestown 2. 1623 in Plymouth 3. 1727 in Boston 4. 1776 in Philadelphia
5. What's the minimal insurance needed for a fireworks display in Alaska?
1. Half a million dollars 2. $1 million 3. $5 million 4. $10 million
6. To get red, fireworks makers mix ____________ salts.
1. Strontium 2. Calcium 3. Sodium 4. Barium
7. Total annual fireworks industry revenue was (A) _________ of which (B) _________ was from consumers (not displays).
(A) 1. $100 million 2. $350 million 3. $725 million 4. $1 billion
(B) 1. $30 million 2. $70 million 3. $200 million 4. $ 725 million
10. How hot are three sparklers together?
1. three times hotter than boiling water 2. as hot as charcoal to cook a steak 3. same as a blowtorch 4. 1240˚F
Answers:
1. Fireworks originated in (A)--------- some (B)------- years ago.
A. 1. Japan 2. China 3. Egypt 4. Greece
B. 1. 700 2. 1000 3. 2000 4. 3000
2. Firecrackers originated in (A)________ some (B) ________ years ago.
A. 1. Japan 2. China 3. Egypt 4. Greece
B. 1. 700 2. 1000 3. 2000 4. 3000
3, Which European nation was the first to develop elaborate fireworks displays?
1. Germany 2. Italy 3. France 4. England
4. The first fireworks display in North American colonies took place in
1. 1608 in Jamestown 2. 1623 in Plymouth 3. 1727 in Boston 4. 1776 in Philadelphia
5. What's the minimal insurance needed for a fireworks display in Alaska?
1. Half a million dollars 2. $1 million 3. $5 million 4. $10 million
6. To get red, fireworks makers mix ____________ salts.
1. Strontium 2. Calcium 3. Sodium 4. Barium
7. Total annual fireworks industry revenue was (A) _________ of which (B) _________ was from consumers (not displays).
(A) 1. $100 million 2. $350 million 3. $725 million 4. $1 billion
(B) 1. $30 million 2. $70 million 3. $200 million 4. $ 725 million
8. Number of annual US injuries per 100 pounds of fireworks used was (A)______ and number of deaths was (B)_____. (This appears to be for 2015, but I'm not sure.)
(A) 1. .5 2. 3.5 3. 7.5 4. 10
(B) 1. 1 2. 4 3. 22 5. 63
9. How do you get the biggest bang for your fireworks bucks?
1. buy in May 2. concentrate on reds 3. don't buy the finale 4. go to local display
10. How hot are three sparklers together?
1. three times hotter than boiling water 2. as hot as charcoal to cook a steak 3. same as a blowtorch 4. 1240˚F
Answers:
"Fireworks originated in China some 2,000 years ago." (From Fireworks University)
"A Chinese monk named Li Tian, who lived near the city of Liu Yang in Hunan Province, is credited with the invention of firecrackers about 1,000 years ago." (From Fireworks University)
"The first European people to make headway in the art of pyrotechny proper appear to have been the Italians. In the book of Artillery by Diego Ufano, written in 1610, he reports that while only very simple fireworks were made in his time in Spain and Flanders, consisting merely of wooden frameworks supporting pots of fire wrapped round with cloth dipped in pitch, more than fifty years earlier magnificent spectacles could be seen in Italy. Vanochio, an Italian, in a work on artillery, dated 1572, attributes to the Florentines and Viennese the honor of being the first to make fireworks on erections of wood, decorated with statues and pictures raised to a great height, some in Florence being seventy-two feet high. He adds that these were illuminated so that they might be seen from a distance, and that the statues threw fire from their mouths and eyes." (From Gizmodo)
"Captain John Smith, governor of the New England colonies, records in his The Generall Historic of Virginia, New-England that on the evening of July 24, 1608, "... we fired a few rockets, which flying in the ayre so terrified the poore Salvages [the Indians], that they supposed nothing unpossible we attempted; and desired to assist us." These firework rockets were brought from England, but beginning in the eighteenth century a native pyrotechnic industry took hold in the new country." (From Gizmodo)
Required. Minimum $1,000,000 for personal injury and death, minimum $500,000 for property damages. (From Fireworks.com)
From Fireworks.com |
Annual consumer fireworks revenue $725,000,000. Total annual fireworks industry revenue (combined display and consumer) $1,060,000,000 (From Statistic Brain)
Number of injuries per 100 lbs of Fireworks used 3.5
Number of deaths in the US annually due to fireworks 4 (From Statistic Brain)
"The tighter the firework is packed, the bigger the boom and higher the burst." (This comes from a post from Penny Pinching Mom that has five points on how to get the best bang for your fireworks bucks.
"A sparkler burns at a temperature over 15 times the boiling point of water. Three sparklers burning together generate the same heat as a blowtorch. When your sparkler goes out, put it in a bucket of water." (From the fireworks firm)
Sunday, July 02, 2017
Connecting Our Hearts And Our Hands - Do You Know Who You Are?
Knowing oneself isn't easy. Every society, every community projects models of who we should be, what we should do. When who we actually are, deviates from the social, cultural, political, religious, or economic ideal, those who don't fit the ideal perfectly are alienated from themselves, their community, or both.
I'm sure readers either know what I'm talking about or strongly reject that notion. I suspect those who strongly reject it are likely to be the ones most denying their own true selves.
OK, let me clarify what I'm talking about.
I've recently finished Amitav Ghosh's The Glass Palace. It starts out in 1885 in Mandalay, the capital of Burma then, just as the British are moving up from Rangoon to capture Mandalay and exile the King and Queen of Burma to a small town on the west coast of India. The main character is an Indian orphan who has gotten a job on a ship that ended up in Mandalay.
The whole book focuses on the Indians who served the British empire and the fundamental question (for me anyway) throughout is, "What does it mean to be an Indian?" Particularly if you are a soldier keeping order among your conquered fellow Indians, and conquering and maintaining order in other colonies like Burma and Malaya?
At times Ghosh is a little heavy handed in this discussion, not that he's wrong, but as a novelist, he could have handled it more subtly. It's hard tracing the way a person slowly awakens to the fact that he's been a prisoner his whole life. But it is a topic all people must ask themselves now and then. Sometimes it's a very heavy burden, sometimes people fit well into the world in which they were born. Or at least think they do as is the case of Arjun in the book. ('Think' isn't even accurate, because Arjun is portrayed as taking things as they are and not even consciously aware of who he is.)
He comes from a well-to-do family and got into officer training school, much to his surprise, since this was not something Indians had been accepted into until just recently. It was a job and adventure to him. But WWII has started and he's sent to Malaya. Skipping lots of details, a woman, Allison, he's attracted to abruptly breaks things off.
Their peril opens Arjun and Hardy to a probing conversation:
Somewhat later, the Japanese return and as the group flees, Arjun gets hit, but manages to get under cover and his batman, Kishan Singh, pulls him into a culvert where they are hidden. His leg wound gets bandaged but he's in pain, thinking about what he's heard.
It does seem to me that the author, Ghosh, is helping Arjun articulate his thoughts. But the points are important ones.
We know that African-American soldiers in WWI and WWII began to question their treatment in the US after being in Europe. Here's a quote that sounds very similar to Arjun's struggle from Philip Klinkner and Rogers Smith, The Unsteady March: The Rise and Decline of Racial Equality in America 167 (2002) cited on the Equal Justice Initiative website. (The piece starts with civil war veterans and moves up to WWI and WWII.)
But those are obvious examples.
What about white soldiers and veterans, recruited to overseas wars to 'protect American freedoms'? What happens when they see how much of war is to protect corporate interests overseas, to keep the arms industry profitable? When they see how many civilians are being killed? When the realize that their fellow recruits are disproportionately less educated and poorer than the average American? And when they get home and they can't get adequate help for their war caused physical and mental problems? Do they start thinking about their true identity and who and what they've really been fighting for?
[Consider the rest of this to be a draft application of the ideas above to current American situations. I don't want to omit it completely because the points from the book do apply to nearly everyone and I don't want readers to feel they are only relevant to history or to other people. They're part of being a human among other humans. But I don't think I've made my points as clearly as I'd like. So consider the following to be rough notes and any support or thoughtful criticism is welcome, which is always the case.]
But this is really about everybody. Because as individual people we have individual interests that aren't consistent with what others expect of us.
What about the people who voted for Donald Trump? How many will ever see how they've been duped for years and years by Fox News and talk radio that panders to their inadequacies and their sense of victimhood? That they've been baited into hating other victims instead of the perpetrators of their problems? How do they square their own sense of victimhood with their ideal of personal responsibility? How do they come to believe that the system is stacked against them when the system has, for so long, been structured to favor them over women and people of color? They never worried about those injustices. They're only upset when the playing field is being made more level and they now are losing their advantages over women and people of color in getting jobs and power. The dysfunctional president we have today was evident throughout the campaign. There's no way anyone should be surprised at the American disgrace in the White House now, unless their hearts were separated from their hands, as Hardy put it in The Glass Palace.
But liberals aren't immune either. I don't want anyone to think I'm setting up a false equivalency here. From Reagan on, conservative ideology has been part of the national oxygen. Being liberal takes more effort than being conservative, more consciousness of inequity and of the gap between American ideals and reality. One has to move beyond an individualist Ayn Rand view of the world and understand the power of mutual cooperation. (Yeah, I know that's an assertion that needs lots more back up. For now let me assert it but I'll need to offer more evidence. I think it's true and if anyone has some support for me on that, let me know. Or proof to the contrary.) But I would argue that people get to their political stances more through environmental influences - family, personal experiences, education, etc. - than by careful, conscious, reasoning.
But group-think infects every group when there isn't active debate and dissent. And much of the separation of heart and hand is related to personal issues and beliefs that are accepted without analysis - like the myth of the magic of the work ethic to allow anyone to succeed in America. What America would look like if everyone became a millionaire (in 2017 dollars). How would all the minimum wage work get done? And at most (not counting deaths in office) only 25 people can be US president per century. What happens to the other 10,000 who believed they could be president if they only tried hard enough? I don't hear work ethic believers talking about how that would actually work if everyone worked hard.
I'm starting to ramble - on topic, but not in a well organized way. The key here is to think about our own conflicts between self and societal models. A certain amount of compromise is necessary for people to live in groups, but how much of that is organized oppression of differences for the benefit of those in power? That, I think is the basic question raised in this Indian/British debate from the book.
I'm sure readers either know what I'm talking about or strongly reject that notion. I suspect those who strongly reject it are likely to be the ones most denying their own true selves.
OK, let me clarify what I'm talking about.
I've recently finished Amitav Ghosh's The Glass Palace. It starts out in 1885 in Mandalay, the capital of Burma then, just as the British are moving up from Rangoon to capture Mandalay and exile the King and Queen of Burma to a small town on the west coast of India. The main character is an Indian orphan who has gotten a job on a ship that ended up in Mandalay.
The whole book focuses on the Indians who served the British empire and the fundamental question (for me anyway) throughout is, "What does it mean to be an Indian?" Particularly if you are a soldier keeping order among your conquered fellow Indians, and conquering and maintaining order in other colonies like Burma and Malaya?
At times Ghosh is a little heavy handed in this discussion, not that he's wrong, but as a novelist, he could have handled it more subtly. It's hard tracing the way a person slowly awakens to the fact that he's been a prisoner his whole life. But it is a topic all people must ask themselves now and then. Sometimes it's a very heavy burden, sometimes people fit well into the world in which they were born. Or at least think they do as is the case of Arjun in the book. ('Think' isn't even accurate, because Arjun is portrayed as taking things as they are and not even consciously aware of who he is.)
He comes from a well-to-do family and got into officer training school, much to his surprise, since this was not something Indians had been accepted into until just recently. It was a job and adventure to him. But WWII has started and he's sent to Malaya. Skipping lots of details, a woman, Allison, he's attracted to abruptly breaks things off.
"Arjun - you're not in charge of what you do; you're a toy, a manufatured thing, a weapon in someone else's hands. Your mind doesn't inhabit your body." (p. 326)He responds, "That's crap." But the issue comes back very soon when the Japanese surprise the British and their Indian soldiers and successfully invade Malaya (as well as the rest of Southeast Asia.) He's with a fellow Indian soldier, Hardy, a long time pre-military friend, who has thought these issues through much more as they face the fact that the Japanese have landed. They've also bombed the Indian troops with leaflets that begin:
"Brothers, ask yourselves what you are fighting for and why you are here: do you really wish to sacrifice your lives for an Empire that has kept your country in slavery for two hundred years?" (p. 337)
Their peril opens Arjun and Hardy to a probing conversation:
"You know, yaar Arjun, over these last few days, in the trenches at Jitra - I had an eerie feeling. It was strange to be sitting on one side of a battle line, knowing that you had to fight and knowing at the same time that it wasn't really your fight; knowing that whether you won or lost, neither the blame nor the credit would be yours. Knowing that you're risking everything to defend a way of life that pushes you to the sidelines. It's almost as if you're fighting against yourself. It's strange to be sitting in a trench, holding a gun and asking yourself: Who is this weapon really aimed at? Am I being tricked into pointing it at myself?"
"I can't say I felt the same way, Hardy."
"But ask yourself, Arjun: what does it mean for you and me to be in this army? You're always talking about soldiering as being just a job. But you know, yaar, it isn't just a job - it's when you're sitting in a trench that you realize that there's something very primitive about what we do. In the everyday world when would you ever stand up and say - 'I'm going to risk my life for this'? As a human being it's something you can only do if you know why you're doing it. But when I was sitting in the trench, it was as if my her and my hand had no connection - each seemed to belong to a different person. It was as if I wasn't really a human being - just a tool, an instrument. This is what I ask myself, Arjun: In what way do I become human again? How do I connect what I do with what I want, in my heart?'" (p. 351, emphasis added)
Somewhat later, the Japanese return and as the group flees, Arjun gets hit, but manages to get under cover and his batman, Kishan Singh, pulls him into a culvert where they are hidden. His leg wound gets bandaged but he's in pain, thinking about what he's heard.
"What was it that Hardy had said the night before? Something about connecting his hand and his heart. He'd been taken aback when he'd said that, it wasn't on for a chap to say that kind of thing But at the same time, it was interesting to think that Hardy - or anyone for that matter, even himself - might want something without knowing it. How was that possible? Was it because no one had taught them the words? The right language? Perhaps because it might be too dangerous? Or because they weren't old enough to know? It was strangely crippling to think that he did not possess the simpler tools of self-consciousness - had no window through which to know that he possessed a within. Was this what Alison had meant about being a weapon in someone else's hands? Odd that Hardy had said the same thing too."(p. 370)Then he asks Kishan to just talk and he talks about the fighting history of his village. He says the soldiers went to fight out of fear. Arjun asks, fear of what?
"'Sah'b,' Kishan Sing said softly, 'all fear is not the same. What is the fear that keeps us hiding here, for instance? Is it a fear of the Japanese, or is it a fear of the British? Or is it a fear of ourselves because we don not know who to fear more? Sah'b, a man may fear the shadow of a gun just as much as the gun itself - and who is to say which is the more real?" (p. 371)Arjun is confused. How could his uneducated batman be more aware of the weight of the past than he himself? He thinks to himself, fear had played no part in his joining the military academy, becoming a soldier.
"He had never thought of his life as different from any other, he had never experienced the slightest doubt about his personal sovereignty; never imagined himself to be dealing with anything other than the full range of human voice. But if it were true that is life had somehow been molded by acts of power of which he was unaware - then it would follow that he had never acted of his own volition; never had a moment of true self consciousness. Everything he had ever assumed about himself was a lie, an illusion. And if this were so, how was he to find himself now?"(p. 372)
It does seem to me that the author, Ghosh, is helping Arjun articulate his thoughts. But the points are important ones.
We know that African-American soldiers in WWI and WWII began to question their treatment in the US after being in Europe. Here's a quote that sounds very similar to Arjun's struggle from Philip Klinkner and Rogers Smith, The Unsteady March: The Rise and Decline of Racial Equality in America 167 (2002) cited on the Equal Justice Initiative website. (The piece starts with civil war veterans and moves up to WWI and WWII.)
“It is impossible to create a dual personality which will be on the one hand a fighting man toward the enemy, and on the other, a craven who will accept treatment as less than a man at home.”1Throughout the 20th century women continually questioned their treatment - demanding the right to vote, to own property in their own name, equal pay, access to universities and to jobs. Gay rights are another obvious example, and listening to Scott Turner Schofield last night telling stories about his transition from female to male I also couldn't help but think of this passage.
But those are obvious examples.
What about white soldiers and veterans, recruited to overseas wars to 'protect American freedoms'? What happens when they see how much of war is to protect corporate interests overseas, to keep the arms industry profitable? When they see how many civilians are being killed? When the realize that their fellow recruits are disproportionately less educated and poorer than the average American? And when they get home and they can't get adequate help for their war caused physical and mental problems? Do they start thinking about their true identity and who and what they've really been fighting for?
[Consider the rest of this to be a draft application of the ideas above to current American situations. I don't want to omit it completely because the points from the book do apply to nearly everyone and I don't want readers to feel they are only relevant to history or to other people. They're part of being a human among other humans. But I don't think I've made my points as clearly as I'd like. So consider the following to be rough notes and any support or thoughtful criticism is welcome, which is always the case.]
What about the people who voted for Donald Trump? How many will ever see how they've been duped for years and years by Fox News and talk radio that panders to their inadequacies and their sense of victimhood? That they've been baited into hating other victims instead of the perpetrators of their problems? How do they square their own sense of victimhood with their ideal of personal responsibility? How do they come to believe that the system is stacked against them when the system has, for so long, been structured to favor them over women and people of color? They never worried about those injustices. They're only upset when the playing field is being made more level and they now are losing their advantages over women and people of color in getting jobs and power. The dysfunctional president we have today was evident throughout the campaign. There's no way anyone should be surprised at the American disgrace in the White House now, unless their hearts were separated from their hands, as Hardy put it in The Glass Palace.
But liberals aren't immune either. I don't want anyone to think I'm setting up a false equivalency here. From Reagan on, conservative ideology has been part of the national oxygen. Being liberal takes more effort than being conservative, more consciousness of inequity and of the gap between American ideals and reality. One has to move beyond an individualist Ayn Rand view of the world and understand the power of mutual cooperation. (Yeah, I know that's an assertion that needs lots more back up. For now let me assert it but I'll need to offer more evidence. I think it's true and if anyone has some support for me on that, let me know. Or proof to the contrary.) But I would argue that people get to their political stances more through environmental influences - family, personal experiences, education, etc. - than by careful, conscious, reasoning.
But group-think infects every group when there isn't active debate and dissent. And much of the separation of heart and hand is related to personal issues and beliefs that are accepted without analysis - like the myth of the magic of the work ethic to allow anyone to succeed in America. What America would look like if everyone became a millionaire (in 2017 dollars). How would all the minimum wage work get done? And at most (not counting deaths in office) only 25 people can be US president per century. What happens to the other 10,000 who believed they could be president if they only tried hard enough? I don't hear work ethic believers talking about how that would actually work if everyone worked hard.
I'm starting to ramble - on topic, but not in a well organized way. The key here is to think about our own conflicts between self and societal models. A certain amount of compromise is necessary for people to live in groups, but how much of that is organized oppression of differences for the benefit of those in power? That, I think is the basic question raised in this Indian/British debate from the book.
Saturday, July 01, 2017
"He has comic timing tattooed to his genes" Scott Turner Schofield Saturday Night At Out North
Tonight night - Saturday, July 1, 7pm - Out North will be presenting Scott Turner Schofield in "How I Became A Man." Out North has transferred their old home in Airport Heights to Cyrano's and Out North is moving to the Alaska Experience Theater. It will be there - 4th and C Street.
There's a lot of unsaid in that first paragraph. I don't know the details, but the ADN had a story two weeks ago. And Friday's paper had a story about Scott's show.
I just think that Scott is an amazing performer and I'd go see anything he was doing. But let me give you some background on how my admiration for Scott came about through some links to old blog posts.
I like to think that I have a good eye now and then, and with Scott I did. I first saw him acting as an MC at OutNorth introducing the Under 30 acts. That was Jan 3, 2010. I wrote:
The next time I wrote about Scott was July of that same year. Again, he introduced the act - Wu Man and Friends- and this time I was really impressed.
Then that October, he mc'd Out North's coming attractions show. I caught a bit of it on video and posted it here. This was just a random couple of minutes, but even then you can see that he moves his body and expresses himself with a lot more fluidity than your average person.
The following September, 2011 Scott has been busy at Out North for a little over a year and here's a post about the introduction to the year. It was a full house. There's some underlying tension as Out North had lost some grant money.
Here's some video of that night. The first four minutes is Scott talking about Out North's evolution.
That November Scott performed 'Two Truths And A Lie." It was his story. Up until then I'd seen him only as an mc, but that night he performed and confirmed my original gut feelings. Here's that post "He has comic timing tattooed on his genes" - Scott Schofield Performs at Out North,
and it explains a lot of what tonight's performance will be about.
And then he quit suddenly and somewhat mysteriously. Eventually he came back and did a show that explained it all. I can't find a post about it, but it was powerful and for many of us an important closure and explanation of why he'd left.
In 2015, we got news that Scott had gotten a role in the tv show "The Bold and the Beautiful." My post on that was called My Fantasy: Jim Minnery and Amy Demboski Meet Scott Turner Schofield.
Wouldn't it be great if they came tonight?
I'm excited we get another chance to see him perform. As I mentioned, Scott has performed this in Anchorage already. It's called, Becoming a Man in 127 Easy Steps. At that time, it was Two Truths And a Lie. As I recall, he was already talking about the 127 Easy Steps and each number between 1 and 127 had a story attached. The audience got to pick numbers and he told the stories of those particular steps. So each performance is different. The ticket agency for the show tonight says he's done this all over the US and Europe and it will be made into a movie. So this is an opportunity to see the movie before it becomes one.
Tickets are available here for only $25 which is a deal considering how good Scott is and how close you'll be to the stage at the Alaska Experience theater.
There's a lot of unsaid in that first paragraph. I don't know the details, but the ADN had a story two weeks ago. And Friday's paper had a story about Scott's show.
I just think that Scott is an amazing performer and I'd go see anything he was doing. But let me give you some background on how my admiration for Scott came about through some links to old blog posts.
I like to think that I have a good eye now and then, and with Scott I did. I first saw him acting as an MC at OutNorth introducing the Under 30 acts. That was Jan 3, 2010. I wrote:
The performances were introduced by Scott Turner Schofield who is a visiting performer who will be putting on Debutante Balls Jan. 14 -17. He seemed totally comfortable onstage and I'm sorry we're going to miss his show, but we leave for Juneau on the 11th.
The next time I wrote about Scott was July of that same year. Again, he introduced the act - Wu Man and Friends- and this time I was really impressed.
Scott Turner Schofield |
"On the right is Scott Schofield, Out North's new artistic director after the performance. Preparation for the performance began just as he arrived at OutNorth. His introduction Wednesday was a pleasure to listen to. His words were good, his delivery fluent, and he effortlessly rotated to acknowledge the audience members sitting behind him on the stage. (See, there are some things I feel have some basis for evaluating.) We're lucky to have him here and I look forward to continuing great nights like Wednesday at OutNorth."
Then that October, he mc'd Out North's coming attractions show. I caught a bit of it on video and posted it here. This was just a random couple of minutes, but even then you can see that he moves his body and expresses himself with a lot more fluidity than your average person.
The following September, 2011 Scott has been busy at Out North for a little over a year and here's a post about the introduction to the year. It was a full house. There's some underlying tension as Out North had lost some grant money.
Here's some video of that night. The first four minutes is Scott talking about Out North's evolution.
That November Scott performed 'Two Truths And A Lie." It was his story. Up until then I'd seen him only as an mc, but that night he performed and confirmed my original gut feelings. Here's that post "He has comic timing tattooed on his genes" - Scott Schofield Performs at Out North,
and it explains a lot of what tonight's performance will be about.
And then he quit suddenly and somewhat mysteriously. Eventually he came back and did a show that explained it all. I can't find a post about it, but it was powerful and for many of us an important closure and explanation of why he'd left.
In 2015, we got news that Scott had gotten a role in the tv show "The Bold and the Beautiful." My post on that was called My Fantasy: Jim Minnery and Amy Demboski Meet Scott Turner Schofield.
Wouldn't it be great if they came tonight?
I'm excited we get another chance to see him perform. As I mentioned, Scott has performed this in Anchorage already. It's called, Becoming a Man in 127 Easy Steps. At that time, it was Two Truths And a Lie. As I recall, he was already talking about the 127 Easy Steps and each number between 1 and 127 had a story attached. The audience got to pick numbers and he told the stories of those particular steps. So each performance is different. The ticket agency for the show tonight says he's done this all over the US and Europe and it will be made into a movie. So this is an opportunity to see the movie before it becomes one.
Tickets are available here for only $25 which is a deal considering how good Scott is and how close you'll be to the stage at the Alaska Experience theater.
Friday, June 30, 2017
Is There Time To Both Garden And Blog?
I ran into an old UAA colleague at the botanical garden yesterday and she asked what kind of plants I was looking for. Shade. I need things that grow in the shade.
M is a botanist and asked if I wanted some monks' hood. They're one of my favorite Alaska
wildflowers so I said yes! Today I went over with my granddaughter to get some monk's hood. I ended up with a ton of different plants from M's amazing garden. She needed to pull things out, she said, so I rationalized I was helping her thin out her garden. Even after a mom and two calf moose pruned her garden and spent the night last night.
But then I got home and had to plant and water everything.
My yard is essentially wild. Part of it is natural Alaskan wild - spruce, birch, cottonwood with an undergrowth of high bush cranberry. Other parts are pretty scraggly looking. I'm not a fan of lawns and ours is a mix of grass, clover, moss, and dandelions. And there are a few beds that I've tended to that look like a garden that's not totally wild.
But as I tried to find places to plant all of M's gifts, I realized there were places on the sides of the house that I'd just given up on. We don't usually go that way and when I tried to put raspberries in, they didn't do well at all. I found one sprouting as I was seeking out spots I could at least give the plants a temporary home until I figured out where I wanted them. I also thought I'd test different locations to see which ones thrived where.
And as I did all this, I realized how much I like digging in the dirt but also how much time it takes to keep everything in tip top shape. M's garden is truly amazing. There are beds everywhere and everything is blooming. Or at least it seems that way. I still have to move the sprinkler to water some of the out of the way spots I planted. And I have to do an inventory of where I planted everything so I'll know what didn't make it. (I'm assuming I'll know what did survive.)
A couple of discoveries while I was wandering the yard.
1. My flax plants that I started from seed and looked so terribly frail when I planted outside, are still alive several weeks later. This is exciting because the last time I planted flax, they survived and receded about 16 years. Last year I realized I was down to my last surviving cluster of flax plants so I got more seeds. The flax flowers are about dime sized and the bloom all summer long.
2. The choke-cherry (May Day tree) whose branches I cut off earlier this spring to keep the flowers from sending seeds all over is totally gone! I had just cut off all the branches. It was just over the fence in the alley. I couldn't even see a trace of the trunk - it was about four or five inches in diameter. I'm guessing the electric utility must have taken it because it was growing under the power line. I thought I was going to have to do away with the rest of the tree. Whoever took it down, thanks. I still have another one in the yard to deal with. I cut off all the flowers, but left it because the leaves are doing a good job of screening the neighbor's yard.
Ok, back to the original question. Yes, I think one can do both, especially if one is a garden blogger, which I am on occasion. The key to the garden, I'm trying to convince myself, is to regularly spend 30-60 minutes in the garden doing stuff and occasionally taking on longer projects.
Monk's Hood |
M is a botanist and asked if I wanted some monks' hood. They're one of my favorite Alaska
wildflowers so I said yes! Today I went over with my granddaughter to get some monk's hood. I ended up with a ton of different plants from M's amazing garden. She needed to pull things out, she said, so I rationalized I was helping her thin out her garden. Even after a mom and two calf moose pruned her garden and spent the night last night.
But then I got home and had to plant and water everything.
My yard is essentially wild. Part of it is natural Alaskan wild - spruce, birch, cottonwood with an undergrowth of high bush cranberry. Other parts are pretty scraggly looking. I'm not a fan of lawns and ours is a mix of grass, clover, moss, and dandelions. And there are a few beds that I've tended to that look like a garden that's not totally wild.
But as I tried to find places to plant all of M's gifts, I realized there were places on the sides of the house that I'd just given up on. We don't usually go that way and when I tried to put raspberries in, they didn't do well at all. I found one sprouting as I was seeking out spots I could at least give the plants a temporary home until I figured out where I wanted them. I also thought I'd test different locations to see which ones thrived where.
And as I did all this, I realized how much I like digging in the dirt but also how much time it takes to keep everything in tip top shape. M's garden is truly amazing. There are beds everywhere and everything is blooming. Or at least it seems that way. I still have to move the sprinkler to water some of the out of the way spots I planted. And I have to do an inventory of where I planted everything so I'll know what didn't make it. (I'm assuming I'll know what did survive.)
Flax |
1. My flax plants that I started from seed and looked so terribly frail when I planted outside, are still alive several weeks later. This is exciting because the last time I planted flax, they survived and receded about 16 years. Last year I realized I was down to my last surviving cluster of flax plants so I got more seeds. The flax flowers are about dime sized and the bloom all summer long.
2. The choke-cherry (May Day tree) whose branches I cut off earlier this spring to keep the flowers from sending seeds all over is totally gone! I had just cut off all the branches. It was just over the fence in the alley. I couldn't even see a trace of the trunk - it was about four or five inches in diameter. I'm guessing the electric utility must have taken it because it was growing under the power line. I thought I was going to have to do away with the rest of the tree. Whoever took it down, thanks. I still have another one in the yard to deal with. I cut off all the flowers, but left it because the leaves are doing a good job of screening the neighbor's yard.
Ok, back to the original question. Yes, I think one can do both, especially if one is a garden blogger, which I am on occasion. The key to the garden, I'm trying to convince myself, is to regularly spend 30-60 minutes in the garden doing stuff and occasionally taking on longer projects.
Thursday, June 29, 2017
Today Was International Mud Day
Z and I went to the Alaska Botanical Garden today to buy some shade loving perennials and had some extra adventures besides.
It turned out to be Mud Day, but they were just setting up and we couldn't stay that long.
From Days of the Year:
The botanical gardens are really growing up and are looking more and more like a serious botanical garden and not just some plots dug out in the woods like it did in the beginning. The irises were blooming in Lile's Garden, one of the nicest spots in the garden.
If you have any young kids who need entertaining, one easy option - if they can play outside - is a spray bottle. We've found these great when we've had people over with kids, and here's the one that my grand daughter loves this one (with some help from photoshop.)
Z went swimming with her grandmother after helping start a loaf of bread. Lots of fun today.
It turned out to be Mud Day, but they were just setting up and we couldn't stay that long.
From Days of the Year:
"The creators of International Mud Day wanted to find a way to help all of the children of the Earth feel closer to each other…and what a better way to do it than through the Earth itself? International Mud Day began in 2009 at a World Forum event, when Gillian McAuliffe from Australia and Bishnu Bhatta from Nepal got together to talk about ways to encourage feelings of community and appreciation for the world around us. The collaboration that followed has inspired educators, children,and families across the globe, from Holland to Nepal to the United States, to celebrate International Mud Day together each year on June 29. Regardless of age, race and religion, covered in mud, we all look the same!"We also got to sit in on a worm workshop for kids that was about the role of worms in composting. There was even a scavenger hunt things to look for in the worm bin compost.
The botanical gardens are really growing up and are looking more and more like a serious botanical garden and not just some plots dug out in the woods like it did in the beginning. The irises were blooming in Lile's Garden, one of the nicest spots in the garden.
If you have any young kids who need entertaining, one easy option - if they can play outside - is a spray bottle. We've found these great when we've had people over with kids, and here's the one that my grand daughter loves this one (with some help from photoshop.)
Z went swimming with her grandmother after helping start a loaf of bread. Lots of fun today.
Labels:
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environment,
Flowers
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
Hanging Out With My Granddaughter
I stayed with the car while J went into the baggage area. Then she came out carrying my granddaughter who then ran to me and gave me a great big, long hug. As I've posted before, not ever having met any of my own grandparents, I didn't realize what I was missing. We have lots planned for her visit.
Today we tried out the new bicycle trailer. Last year we borrowed the kind that's like a stroller attached to the back of a bike. This time I got a bike off Craigslist that attaches to my seat stem. I told her she can't fall asleep this time - she's got to keep her hands on the handle bars and feet on the peddles. She hasn't mastered riding a bike on her own and I was completely sure how this was going to work out.
But as soon as I started pedaling, everything was just fine. She was totally delighted. We got to Campbell Creek and stopped on the bridge to check for salmon.
Here's the bike with the trailer attached under the seat. We did eventually have some problems because it wasn't attached tightly enough. No danger of it coming off, but it twisted to left and I'd here, "I'm sideways" and we'd stop and and adjust it.
I hadn't seen any salmon yet this summer, but there they were today. I don't have a polarizing filter on my little camera - I don't think I can even put a filter on it. But there are six or seven reddish shapes under the water above the white water around the rocks. They were easier to see in the original and you might do better if you click on the picture, or just check the picture below. It was like they were daring each other to be the first to try to break through. We waited about five minutes - which is like an hour for a four year old - and then we rode on.
At the next bridge the fish were easier to see.
If you start in the lower left corner and look up toward the middle along the plants, you should see the reddish shapes in the water. By this time though, the attachment was getting looser and the trailer was shifting more frequently, so we turned back and went to the playground by Lake Otis. Kids playgrounds have gotten much more interesting and much safer over the years and she had a great time exploring. This playground also has one of those community library boxes and she got some books and we read a while.
By then, the trailer was getting looser so we walked the bikes home. I need to tighten it better. But we made some lunch and ate on the deck. Z has a little sprayer and is spraying everything with water. I had thought she might find the crossword puzzle interesting. Her vocabulary is big enough that she'd get some of it. After I filled in a few, she wanted the pen, and to my surprise wrote in the letters. It was slow and they weren't always facing the right direction, but she did do it. I can read them anyway, but I know what she was trying to write. Like 10 down is GRAB. I had to tell her the letters.
I'd show you some playground pictures, and I wouldn't have cut off the rest of the bike in the first picture, but grandchild pictures are off limits. Which is fine. There are some strange people lurking out there - none of my regular readers, of course. Well, maybe a few. Here's a picture of the bike trailer when I bought it.
Tuesday, June 27, 2017
Notes On The News: The Symbolism Of Killing Obamacare, Of Travel Bans, Hawaiian Shirts, And Of Income Taxes
[These are my quick reactions to things I saw in the Alaska Dispatch News, paper edition, today. Links are to what I could get online. The ADN takes national stories from other papers, so the links get to them instead of ADN and may have different headlines. And even the ADN articles online may have different headlines than the paper edition.]
1. CBO: 22 million would join uninsured
My Take: The Republican brand has been anti-Obama for so long that they have forgotten what they are for. Their key symbol of Obama has been the ACA or what they dubbed Obamacare. And Trump, who wasn't particularly involved in Republican politics before his campaign, piggybacked on the Fox News generated hate of Obamacare among his 'base' and made 'repeal and replace' one of his key campaign goals.
So now Majority Leader McConnell is willing to wreak havoc for tens of millions of Americans who will be edged out of health care access, just so he can say, "We got rid of Obamacare." It would be fascinating to know what psychic demons are driving McConnell's sick mission.
This is all symbolism, with potentially deadly consequences for many Americans.
2. Supreme Court to hear case on travel ban
Basically the court said the 90 day ban on people coming from six Muslim nations and the 120 day suspension on the nation's refugee program, could happen, but with limits. Trump claims victory, travel advocates say the decision will impact only a few.
But I'm looking at the issues of dates and security. This ban was imposed right after Trump took office, in late January. A CNN report from Jan 29 says:
Trump said in February, "nobody knew that healthcare could be so complicated." Of course we all knew, and we all know now that if Trump doesn't know something, he believes 'nobody knows' it. Middle East peace isn't as easy as he thought either.
He also had no idea of the high level of vetting that already existed for refugees to get into the United States. And he still has no idea of the suffering and hardships and fear refugees experience trying to get out of danger and into a permanent home, and how his polices just makes things worse for them. And our Republican controlled congress. . . well see the first headline above. The bans were just symbols for his base and his own ego.
3. Rick Koch (1956 - 2017)
3. How to fix alaska's fiscal problem for the long haul
When I read this title, it hit me: everyone is talking about a fiscal problem. Alaska has no fiscal problem, we have an ideology problem - the Senate majority is so stuck on the evils of an income tax that they can't see the forest for the trees. As this opinion piece spells out, the compromise our legislature just made, pretty much drained the Constitutional Budget Reserve (CBR).
1. CBO: 22 million would join uninsured
My Take: The Republican brand has been anti-Obama for so long that they have forgotten what they are for. Their key symbol of Obama has been the ACA or what they dubbed Obamacare. And Trump, who wasn't particularly involved in Republican politics before his campaign, piggybacked on the Fox News generated hate of Obamacare among his 'base' and made 'repeal and replace' one of his key campaign goals.
So now Majority Leader McConnell is willing to wreak havoc for tens of millions of Americans who will be edged out of health care access, just so he can say, "We got rid of Obamacare." It would be fascinating to know what psychic demons are driving McConnell's sick mission.
This is all symbolism, with potentially deadly consequences for many Americans.
2. Supreme Court to hear case on travel ban
Basically the court said the 90 day ban on people coming from six Muslim nations and the 120 day suspension on the nation's refugee program, could happen, but with limits. Trump claims victory, travel advocates say the decision will impact only a few.
"The court said the ban could not be imposed on anyone who had 'a credible claim of a bona fide relationship with a person or entity in the United States.'”Immigrant advocates say such a bonafide relationship means people with relatives in the US, who have been accepted into universities or been offered jobs, or asked to give a speech. Most applicants meet these standards, the advocates say, so the ban will affect few people.
But I'm looking at the issues of dates and security. This ban was imposed right after Trump took office, in late January. A CNN report from Jan 29 says:
Trump barred citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US for at least the next 90 days by executive order, which a senior White House official said later Friday is likely just a first step toward establishing a broader ban.
"Trump also stopped the admission of all refugees to the United States for four months.So they've had plenty of time - more than the 90 and 120 days - to expand the ban and review the refugee process. They should be ready now. If not, it will be nearly another 120 days before the court hears the case. So it will be moot. Except probably what they wanted won't be allowed.
During that time, Trump's secretary of state will review the application and screening process for refugees to be admitted to the US."
Trump said in February, "nobody knew that healthcare could be so complicated." Of course we all knew, and we all know now that if Trump doesn't know something, he believes 'nobody knows' it. Middle East peace isn't as easy as he thought either.
He also had no idea of the high level of vetting that already existed for refugees to get into the United States. And he still has no idea of the suffering and hardships and fear refugees experience trying to get out of danger and into a permanent home, and how his polices just makes things worse for them. And our Republican controlled congress. . . well see the first headline above. The bans were just symbols for his base and his own ego.
3. Rick Koch (1956 - 2017)
"For the Celebration of Life, attendees are invited to wear loud Hawaiian shirts, awful camouflaged shorts and/or mismatched prints in honor of Rick's truly horrendous fashion sense."An obituary that starts out like this suggests that the good things it says about Rick Koch are probably true. He died too young (age 60 in a motorcycle accident), but it sounds like he was a good man who loved people and helping out.
3. How to fix alaska's fiscal problem for the long haul
When I read this title, it hit me: everyone is talking about a fiscal problem. Alaska has no fiscal problem, we have an ideology problem - the Senate majority is so stuck on the evils of an income tax that they can't see the forest for the trees. As this opinion piece spells out, the compromise our legislature just made, pretty much drained the Constitutional Budget Reserve (CBR).
A $13 billion CBR could have generated $650 million a year – year after year after year. At the end of the coming fiscal year, according to press reports, only $2 billion will be left.This is a good piece (translation: I agree with most of it, though I think he's a bit near-sighted about the Permanent Fund) and I recommend people read it. A step in changing the ideology problem in the state senate is the announcement that Fairbanks representative Scott Kawasaki is seriously considering running for the state senate seat now held by Senate Majority leader Pete Kelly.
Labels:
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Knowing,
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Monday, June 26, 2017
Anchorage Pridefest 5: Fire and Brimstone
The Pridefest was not all sweetness and light. There were a few folks who were there to pass on their interpretation of God's word, and it wasn't pretty. I went to the spot to figure out what was going on. There was this big sign, the rainbow flag, drummers, and people dressed like angels. I asked one of the angels what was happening and why she was there. Her reply was something like, "I get harassed every day. I don't need to hear it at Pridefest where I should be safe with welcoming people."
So, the angels and the flag were surrounding the protests, blocking them from view and the drums were drowning out their message.
There are lots of interpretations of the bible. Many conclude that homosexuality as we know it today is not what the bible refers to. For example, this evangelical who believes practicing homosexuality is a sin, argues that the sin of Sodom was NOT homosexuality.
The woman in the white tee shirt with the microphone was droning on and on. I don't mean to be disrespectful, but it really didn't make any sense to me. I'm sure all the drumming didn't help. Someone told me that this group was from the Valley and they showed up last year and no one was prepared. This year they were prepared. They were even passing out earplugs. [My wife, who wasn't there, thinks the word 'droning' is too judgmental. Normally I'd try to find another word, but 'harangue' isn't neutral either. But to my ear, both are good descriptions of lecturing to a crowd of people who simply don't want to hear what you have to say.]
This does, of course, raise free speech questions for some. As the first woman I spoke to said, "This is the one day I shouldn't have to hear this sort of thing." I expect 99% of the people at Pridefest don't want to hear this woman. They've heard messages like hers all their lives. One could argue she's disturbing their peace. But Pridefest isn't shutting her down, they're just counter protesting her. And anyone who wants to know what her message is can come in close and listen.
I'd note the implication of 'real Christians' on the tee shirt would seem to be, "If you disagree with me on this, then you aren't a real Christian." I've always heard the the most important message of Christianity was: "do onto other what you'd have others to do onto you." That's not something these folks are doing.
If you click on the image, it will get clearer and you can see at the bottom it references Matthew 19: 4-7.
Well, here's Matthew 9 4-7
But let's read the rest of this section of Matthew:
So, the angels and the flag were surrounding the protests, blocking them from view and the drums were drowning out their message.
There are lots of interpretations of the bible. Many conclude that homosexuality as we know it today is not what the bible refers to. For example, this evangelical who believes practicing homosexuality is a sin, argues that the sin of Sodom was NOT homosexuality.
"There’s nothing in Genesis 19 that talks about gay people. The main sin committed in Genesis 19 was attempted gang rape. And I don’t know any gay person who’s trying to justify gang rape. In fact, whenever Sodom is mentioned elsewhere in the Bible, the city is usually described as being inhospitable and not caring for the poor — an ironic description of many straight Christians."I'm not a biblical scholar and don't know Hebrew or Aramaic, so I'm not qualified to interpret these passages. I can only point out that various Christians (and Jews) have different interpretations about what the bible says about homosexuality. Another writer I saw claims the opposite of this quote - that Sodom was not about lacking hospitality and it was all about homosexuality.
The woman in the white tee shirt with the microphone was droning on and on. I don't mean to be disrespectful, but it really didn't make any sense to me. I'm sure all the drumming didn't help. Someone told me that this group was from the Valley and they showed up last year and no one was prepared. This year they were prepared. They were even passing out earplugs. [My wife, who wasn't there, thinks the word 'droning' is too judgmental. Normally I'd try to find another word, but 'harangue' isn't neutral either. But to my ear, both are good descriptions of lecturing to a crowd of people who simply don't want to hear what you have to say.]
This does, of course, raise free speech questions for some. As the first woman I spoke to said, "This is the one day I shouldn't have to hear this sort of thing." I expect 99% of the people at Pridefest don't want to hear this woman. They've heard messages like hers all their lives. One could argue she's disturbing their peace. But Pridefest isn't shutting her down, they're just counter protesting her. And anyone who wants to know what her message is can come in close and listen.
I'd note the implication of 'real Christians' on the tee shirt would seem to be, "If you disagree with me on this, then you aren't a real Christian." I've always heard the the most important message of Christianity was: "do onto other what you'd have others to do onto you." That's not something these folks are doing.
If you click on the image, it will get clearer and you can see at the bottom it references Matthew 19: 4-7.
Well, here's Matthew 9 4-7
4 “Haven’t you read,” he replied, “that at the beginning the Creator ‘made them male and female,’1 5 and said, ‘For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh’2? 6 So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” 7 “Why then,” they asked, “did Moses command that a man give his wife a certificate of divorce and send her away?”Hmmm, good question.
8 Jesus replied, “Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard. But it was not this way from the beginning. 9 I tell you that anyone who divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery.”Leviticus says the punishment for all sexual immorality starting with adultery and including 'a man lies with a man as with a woman' is death. I haven't heard about anyone picketing the divorce courts. I did look quickly to make sure and only found reference to people opposing orthodox Jewish men who don't allow their wives to divorce. I wonder if the picketers at Pridefest voted for the president who's on his third wife and was practicing sexual immorality with his second wife when he was still married to his first wife?
But let's read the rest of this section of Matthew:
10 The disciples said to him, “If this is the situation between a husband and wife, it is better not to marry.” 11 Jesus replied, “Not everyone can accept this word, but only those to whom it has been given. 12 For there are eunuchs who were born that way, and there are eunuchs who have been made eunuchs by others—and there are those who choose to live like eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. The one who can accept this should accept it.”
Professor of Theology and Ethical Studies Stephen J. Patterson interprets what "when a man lies with a man as with a woman" might mean in the context of the Middle East 2500 years ago. He argues it does not mean what we call homosexuality today. Instead he argues it's a form of dominance by one heterosexual male over another. He then points out the example Jonathan and Samuel, "“Your love to me was wonderful, surpassing the love of women.”
I'm not a biblical scholar and I don't necessarily buy this interpretation, but enough denominations of Christianity, not to mention of Judaism, accept gay love and marriage that I have to believe that when reading the original Hebrew and maybe even Aramaic, there's lots of room for interpretation.
I don't have a neat ending for this. I'm just documenting what I saw and what I've been able to find online to help me interpret the bible passages. I don't pretend that these interpretations I've quoted are 'right' just that they exist.
I don't have a neat ending for this. I'm just documenting what I saw and what I've been able to find online to help me interpret the bible passages. I don't pretend that these interpretations I've quoted are 'right' just that they exist.
Anchorage Pridefest 4: Dogs of Pridefest
Let's start with little dogs. Rachel's got her pup in a front pack because it's got a recovering foot. But the dog attracted a hello from a vet and there was a long discussion. There's hemp based medication you can get for dogs. One issue I hadn't thought about given the legal status of marijuana in Alaska now, was an increase of dogs coming to the vet after consuming cannabis edibles. They either come in very dopey or very wired.
There were also middle sized dogs.
And very big dogs.
The first post on Pridefest covered this year's parade.
The second covered businesses that had booths at the Pridefest.
The third was people.
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