Thursday, June 3, 2010

Daring - and Foolish - Cyclist

A guy dressed in black rode a bicycle down terrifying Harvard Ave., where delivery trucks, buses and taxis compete with passenger cars to squeeze past obstacles.

The cyclist wore a black baseball cap, and a bike helmet dangled from his backpack.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Season's first paddle

Three of us arrived at St. Alban's National Wildlife Reserve in central Maine with visions of a secluded, duck-filled pond for paddling dancing in our heads.

But the dream was still a few weeks away. Late April is still very early spring in Northern New England. The leaves are just beginning to peak out, tiny and pale green, and the edges of the pond are still brown and bare, leaving an exposed expanse of chilly water.

While John and Spencer experimented with turning their telescopes into camera lenses, even without ducks to photograph, I pulled into the water in my kayak. In spite of the cold wind, it was lovely to be there, and I focused on the sensory pleasure of gliding along and hearing the tinkling of water with each dip of the paddle.

Red-winged blackbirds filled the bare bushes along the shore, and tree swallows flew overhead. I spied a loon nest site roped off. Next visit, I'll listen for the loons but steer clear of their space.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Snowshoeing in Dexter

Very little snow has fallen in Central Maine since December, but some of it has stuck around in spots thanks to the cold temperatures. On Sunday, we took a crunchy snowshoe walk in the woods with our friend John through his family's 85 acres east of Dexter. Lovely and quiet. We followed an ice-covered stream to a frozen cascade, opaque, frothy blue-green ice like blobs of tinted whipped cream. Deer had left scat here and there, but we did not see the animals themselves. Deer population is way down in Maine this year.

The chickadees were everywhere, especially at the feeder in front of the house. Four red squirrels feasted on the seeds fallen to the ground beneath the feeder, poking in and out of the burrows they had dug in the snowbank.

Met John's nephew and chatted awhile. Lovely winter morning.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Polish Fast Food - Zaps

A Zap is a cheap and delicious open-faced sandwich served at Zaps restaurant on Brighton Avenue in Allston. The slim, 16-inch loaf is sliced lengthwise, topped with cheese, mushrooms, and onions and toasted. The basic Zap costs $3.99, and you can add keilbasa, ham, olives, corn, and other goodies for another dollar or two.

The bread is soft inside, crisp on the outside, and the melted cheese is just gooey enough to be divine.

Zaps, sodas, and chips are all the restaurant serves, but what else do you need?

The young owner of Zaps is from Poland, where the sandwich originated. He faces a challenge because the restaurant is tucked in behind another business, and only the door is visible from the street.

I hope the place catches on. It's getting a lot of buzz with the shop owners and the BU crowd. I love seeing someone walking down the street with a foil-wrapped, torpedo-shaped package under the arm.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

20 years of the Internet

The Internet is 20 years old, and I can barely remember the world without it.

Our first Mac (1997-ish) came with a super-fast modem (1400bps). We signed up for AOL, plugged it in and stared at each other in amazement at the staticky "connected" sound. We finally cancelled AOL after we got DSL at the cabin, and the customer service woman seemed genuinely sad. We'd had the account for 13 years.

In my web development class, we looked at the evolution of the White House web site from 1996 to 2009. It started out as a plain gray window with black type and a few blue, underlined hyperlinks. The following year, it featured a small color photo of the White House, and then gradually became more colorful and full of information. Today the first page of the site contains slide shows, video clips, and an extensive index to rich content.

While the site reveals how the web has changed, the class itself is an astonishing example of how the Internet has changed the world.

For one thing, I couldn't make it to class that night, so I watched it online a few days later. I ordered the textbooks online using a gift card, but I got an email notice that shipment would be delayed. No problem. I discovered that I could read the books for free on Pro Quest with my Harvard ID.

It's possible that I could complete a Harvard course entirely on my laptop without ever leaving the loveseat in my living room. And I don't have a souped-up laptop. It's 6 years old and a little clunky.

But the course is just the beginning.

Spencer was looking online at a house for sale in Vermont and went to Google maps to take an eye-level stroll down the street to the town center, past the newspaper office and the Yummy Wok restaurant.

Want a pair of golf knickers? Google the phrase to find GolfKnickers.com, where you can get knickers in dozens of colors and fabrics, plus coordinating argyle socks and sweaters.

Can't remember who played the father in the first Flipper movie? Ask a search engine, and you'll have the answer in three seconds.

I know I'm stating the obvious. For more than half the people on the planet, life without the Internet never was. For the rest of us, it's becoming a distant memory, but there was a time when you couldn't check the weather in Athens, Greece, and the only way you could find something like knickers was to visit several specialty shops or have them made.

And if you didn't actually go to class, you were out of luck.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Getting old on the Green Line

Riding home from the central library last night on the Green Line, my young fellow travelers reminded me that, regardless of how young I feel, the world sees something different.

I climbed aboard a packed trolley car on a wind-whipped, rainy day and squeezed my way through college students and young professionals carrying dripping umbrellas and backpacks. A woman jumped to her feet and offered me her seat.

Old lady comin' through. For God sakes, somebody let her sit down!

Having spent the whole day seated on a wooden library chair, I thanked her and declined.

Another old lady, maybe mid-40s, looked a little worried as she studied the route map.

Spotting the other old lady in the car [that was me], a glimmer of hope lit up in her eyes.

"Do you know the stop for Kendrick Hospital?" she asked.

Boston has dozens of hospitals, but I'd never heard of that one. Sorry, I said with what I hoped was a kind smile.

All around me, the iPhones and similar contraptions came out, and the thumbs were flying. Somebody called up a map and showed the lady where the hospital was.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

A Strange Week in Local Journalism

This week I covered two stories in Woburn, Mass. One was uplifting, the other baffling.

Monday I attended the MLK Luncheon sponsored by St. John's Baptist Church. Woburn is a very white place, and I've met few black residents while covering government and school functions. So I was disappointed that most of the church members at the event were not actually from Woburn, although some had lived there at one time.

The keynote speaker attended college at the height of the Civil Rights movement and went to jail for nonviolent protests. He lived with real injustices, like having to eat in the back room even at the restaurant where he worked. He went on to have a great career as an engineer and an entrepreneur and to provide a life of privilege for his children and grandchildren. But he still had a catch in his voice when he talked about those days.

He had paved the way to equality and then watched Obama take that road to the White House. I can't imagine what that felt like.

And it must have been bitter these past few months as support for health care reform dwindled along with support for Obama, whose star dimmed so quickly. This time last year, all things seemed possible, but now, Obama is just another disappointing politician.

He's so disappointing that a virtually unknown conservative Republican won Ted Kennedy's seat in the U.S. Senate yesterday. That was the second story I covered.

Speaking to voters as they left the polls, I made a disturbing discovery. People who voted for Martha Coakley identified specific reasons why: health care, gay marriage, education. People who voted for Scott Brown talked in generalities: a fresh new face, seems like an intelligent guy, no more business as usual. They knew little or nothing about his positions on the issues, or they didn't want to tell a reporter that they didn't want health care reform or gay marriage.

Even Brown volunteers had nothing to say about issues. The only Republican who actually mentioned issues to me was the chairman of the local committee. He said that people want health care reform, but they are worried that the Democrats have come up with the wrong plan.

As for the Democrats, their Coakley campaign broke all records for arrogance and incompetence, the very charges they recently leveled against George W. Bush.

Bush is not the brightest bulb in the chandelier, he still deserved the respect of the office, and we liberals did not give that to him.

My sister Gerry pointed that out last month. Hearing people say that Obama is not their president and seeing him heckled by a congressman during a speech, she began to question some of the personal attacks against Bush when he was president.

And she made me think, too. It reminded me of a time at work when a co-worker, promoted to his Peter Principle level of incompetence, was really struggling. Instead of helping him, everybody gave him a hard time, including me. We were angry that he made our jobs harder. But it started to turn into bullying. That's when two of us started correcting instead of criticizing, and he improved.

I felt really horrible when I saw my complicity in what was happening to that guy, and that feeling came back when Gerry talked about liberals' treatment of Bush.

That doesn't mean we shouldn't make fun of the President. That is our privilege, even our obligation. But it has to come with some respect for the office.

Friday, January 15, 2010

A Few of My Favorite Things

The first moment of a simple pleasure is especially delightful:
When I first get under the covers on a chilly night.
The first sip of coffee in the morning.
Stepping out of the office and into Friday evening.
Pulling out onto the street with the car gassed up and packed for a trip to Harmony.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Allston coming back to life after holidays

The students cleared out a few days before Christmas, leaving Allston deserted, but now that the holidays are over, they are back preparing for spring semester.

Sunday is shopping day, and the supermarket and sidewalks were jammed with young folks toting packages. Reflecting a new atmosphere of frugality, two students picked their way down the ice-banked sidewalk, each carrying two 12-packs of toilet paper.

In spite of their return, Brighton Avenue was fairly quiet late at night this weekend, thanks to bitter cold temperatures that kept the party people indoors.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Christmas week in Harmony: Part Three

Last day of a relaxing week in the little cabin in Maine. The threatened storm turned out to be powerful but brief with less than 10 inches of snow, but the wind blew all the snow off the pine trees, erasing the "winter wonderland" feel of the place.

No matter. Sunday was above freezing and cloudy with occasional slush balls falling. Our plan to snowshoe in the woods was thwarted when we discovered we had a serious ice dam on the roof. I knocked down 5-foot icicles and got hit in the face with a shard, giving me a little cut on the lip. Ralphie of A Christmas Story fame would have been impressed.

We spent several hours breaking up the ice along the edge of the roof with a hatchet and raking off two feet of snow. Actually, Spencer spent several hours doing that while I held the ladder, handed him tools and dodged hunks of ice and snow. We were both soaked and freezing by dusk, but we got it done.

Afterwards, we got into dry clothes, stoked the fire, and sipped hot apple cider while watching football on TV. The most blissful hour of the whole week.

Tomorrow I drive back to Boston over precarious road conditions, but if I can get the little Scion 0.3 miles to the main road in town, it will be smooth sailing.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Pyrography and Celtic Knotwork

Christmas week in Harmony: Part Two

On New Year’s Day, it snowed lightly all day long, covering the pine trees surrounding the cabin with white powder and softening the footprints that humans, dogs and deer left in the snow.

We walked into town for such necessities as newspapers, mayonnaise and lemon pies, and squandered four dollars on losing lottery tickets.

Since the advent of all-digital broadcast television last year, we receive only ABC and Fox. Fortunately, we could tune in the Capital One and Rose Bowls, so we got our dose of college football to make it feel like New Year’s.

Both too exhausted last night to add late-night logs to the fire, we woke at 5 a.m. this morning toasty under three comforters despite an indoor temperature of 45 degrees. With patient tending, Spencer got a nice blaze going in the stove, and by 8:00, it was 55, tolerable if you wear several layers, sip lots of black coffee, and wrap yourself in a lap robe.

The predicted big storm is due in today with high winds. I plan to trudge into town in snowshoes for a newspaper.

Friday, January 1, 2010

Celtic Knotwork


For the past few months, I’ve been drawing Celtic knotwork.


I use the word “knotwork” as a general term for the interlaced borders and panels that decorate the Books of Kells and Lindisfarne, as well as illuminated manuscripts, metalwork and stone carvings throughout the ancient Celtic world. However, knotwork is actually one of several pattern types such as plaitwork, spirals and key patterns.


I use two pattern books for reference: Celtic Art: The Methods of Construction by George Bain; and The Treasury of Celtic Knots by Aidan Meehan. One style pattern is formed by a continuous ribbon whose course is amazing to follow; others use multiple ribbons, which can be distinguished using several colors.


I plot dots for the pattern on graph paper, requiring a bit of simple math and a lot of counting, similar to needlepoint. Using a light box to see the dots, I pencil in the path of the pattern as a single line on a sheet of plain drawing paper. Next, I sketch in double lines along the path to form a ribbon, doing my best to keep its thickness even through all the twists and curves.


My partner Spencer once looked over my shoulder at my dots and intersecting lines and said, “Good Lord!” At this stage, it looks like a needlessly complicated muddle.


Now for the tricky part. Before applying ink, I follow the entire pattern and erase overlapping lines to show where the ribbon weaves “over” and “under” as it intersects other ribbons and doubles back on itself. Next, I ink in the lines with a black, felt-tip pen and then erase all the pencil lines.


If the pattern has multiple strands, I take another journey along the intricate paths to color each with a different colored pencil,.


Finally, I fill in the background with a black Sharpie.


It’s a lot of physical labor for something that could be done more precisely in half an hour in Adobe Illustrator. So what’s the point?


Following these labyrinths as the original artists did is remarkably satisfying, a kind of meditation. As the mind focuses entirely on the path, all thoughts requiring words disappear.


And in the end, you have something elemental and beautiful.


Knotwork is also an excellent subject for pyrography.