Sunday, September 21, 2008

The changing of the seasons

I often like to commemorate the transition of the seasons - any seasons, fall to winter, spring to summer - and now, from summer to fall. I can hardly wait for the days to cool off, for the first early morning hints of temperatures that dropped to freezing or below overnight, and for, of course, the sensory glories of changing foliage, wet brilliant multicolored leaves underfoot. Is there anything about summer I might miss? Sure - baby animals all around, birdsong, glowing sunny days, people on the sidewalks and parks basking in the easy living of summer. But when I think about it, it's probably the summer fruits that I miss the most. The eating of course is terrific, but the mixed smell of ripening fruits in a bowl is the best. Even though of course we get fruits and vegetables from around the world 24/7/365, January produce just cannot match what comes to us May through September.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

China's changing economy


These last couple of posts on subjects related to the Peoples Republic of China inspired me to look back through the three-some-thousands slides I have from my two trips there in the early 1980s. There are so many it will take me months (if not years!) to scan them all in, but I rather liked this little one, taken at a street market that I can't reconstruct until I can lay my hands on the numbered key that will tell me with great precision. Until then, let it just serve as a reminder of how far China's market economy has come since then, and most certainly, where it very well may be going.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Chinese foot-binding: tradition or not, let's not celebrate it


This weekend we visited a favorite Chicago landmark, the venerable Field Museum of Natural History (more about that interesting visit, perhaps, on another day). Part of the fun is looking through the ever-vaster gift shops on the main floor across from Sue the Tyrannosaurus. Most of the stuff in the gift shops is just that: stuff, albeit nice stuff, from around the world. The inflated prices suggest that buying goodies from the Museum helps its bottom line, which is all to the good. However, one item in a special locked case really caught my eye. It was an antique Chinese lotus shoe. For those not familiar with lotus shoes, please take a look at this 1995 article by James A. Crites. In spite of long having known much of this background, I have most of my life just gone along for the ride when confronted with anything having to do with foot-binding (including on two extended trips to the Peoples Republic of China in the early 1980's, where it was not much flaunted, as the modern regime dealt with things it found denigrating to its image). But for whatever reason, this morning I was moved to address the following to the museum gift shop manager:
"I am writing to you as manager of the Field Museum Gift Shop regarding objects offered for sale in the store that deserve a second thought.
When in the shop this Saturday I saw for sale in a special locked case "lotus shoes" made for Chinese women with feet deformed by the traditional practice of binding. Although they are indeed objects of intrinsic beauty and craftsmanship, I would suggest that in the 21st century they represent more strongly a thousand years of cruelty (in the extreme) to children and institutionalized abuse of women, and therefore are inappropriate to include among the Field Museum's merchandise offerings.
I found this article on the subject to be thorough and well-written. If you are not already familiar with the process required to produce "lotus feet" you will learn a lot about it as well as the context in which it took place. I do hope it will inspire you to re-consider selling the beautiful little symbols of such a terrible practice."

Then I decided to look into the market for "lotus shoes" and found that it thrives. I too can appreciate the stunning craftsmanship that went into making these little treasures. But when I picture a 7 year old girl having her feet intentionally broken (without anesthesia, of course) and tightly bound for years (that is, if she survived the metabolic trauma of multiple broken bones and the ensuing life-threatening infections and necrosis) I think it might be time to re-examine the propriety of marketing reminder of such practices for profit.
The Field Museum's price tag for the comparatively simply fashioned lotus shoe was $400.

Photo linked from the Virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco, thank you.


Monday, August 11, 2008

Hey, folks, it's NOT bey-zhing

Beijing: it's bey-djing. Isn't it easier to imagine how "bey-djing" might have been heard as Peking than "bey-zhing"? Will someone clue in all these media announcers, please!!



Friday, August 8, 2008

Is it really so weird?

Some time ago I was walking with my assistant across the university campus where we work. My assistant is a woman in her early 30s, exceptionally intelligent (and smart, too), and working steadily on completing her postponed college degree. Someone walked by with an irresistibly cute dog so we stopped to pat it; the owner declared the dog to be a labradoodle, a newly established breed created by crossing a standard poodle with a labrador retriever. As we went on our way, my assistant harrumphed, expressing the feeling that it’s “just not right” and “weird” to make new animal types by mixing existing breeds. Though it almost sounded like it, I am sure the origin of this was not some unconscious feelings about miscegenation–she herself is in a mixed-race marriage and has children. So where does this discomfort come from? I reminded her that all domestic dog breeds arose from the manipulation of man, and only the manipulation of man. Compare baseline domesticated dogs to the chihuahuas, beagles, german shepherds, and great danes, not to mention labradoodles, that everyone is familiar with, and think about how they came to their unique characteristics, I urged.
The other morning there was a piece on NPR about genetically modified corn and other crops, and world-wide concerns about using engineered seed stocks because of the potential–or likelihood–that the DNA of natively-developed hybrids would become contaminated by the introduced varieties through cross-pollination. While there are very important issues swirling around still to be satisfactorily answered (such as genetic contamination not just of endemic cultivars, but of native wild plants), all other things aside, the genetic modifications clearly vastly improve the ratio of usable to unusable yield and in many cases (e.g., golden rice) also truly enhance the nutritive value of food products in areas of the world where it is most urgently needed.
After all, though, genetic modifications developed in sophisticated university and corporate laboratories are driven by the same needs and result in the same kinds of improvements corn- and other crop-growers achieved so very laboriously through the ages, only at speed that is like lightning in comparison, and with a priori aims defined with razor-sharp precision. See http://www.genetics.org/cgi/content/full/158/2/487 for more history of the pre-Columbian development of maize/corn, for instance.

I’m not a scientist, not even an amateur expert on such matters. But I do think keeping issues like genetic manipulation and hybridization, that seem to make people so nervous, in historical and geographical perspective would go a long way towards rational discussion and ultimately, expediting improvement of the human condition.

(Labradoodle image borrowed from Valley View Dogs, thank you.)

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Where are they hiding all the kitty litter??

Is it just me? Do they hide the 25 lb bags of generic, unscented kitty litter when they see me coming? Yesterday my friendly local Wal-Mart had none; the Ultra Foods mega-grocery store next door was all out. Today, the Jewel store on Roosevelt Road had none either. I think it is a conspiracy and CNN better get on the stick!!

Friday, July 11, 2008

For Troutbirder


Thanks for your nice comment - wish I could say that's my video, but it's linked to someone else's post on YouTube.
This photo of Lamar ("Lamar with Bison Dots") is mine, however. Enjoy!

Thursday, July 10, 2008

HAHAHA

Now this (the drive from Gardiner, MT, to West Yellowstone, MT, via Yellowstone National Park) put me in a better mood!

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Just in case ya'll care

There are lots of things that really irritate me in this world, such as: finding the perfect lipstick (or nail polish) and having it disappear from every store three days before it runs out and I want a new one; the rarest of rare, the perfect brassiere that evaporates from the face of every retail outlet on the earth when it's time to buy its replacement. I travel a lot, and have been expecting my oh-so-useful toiletries bag to expire at any moment it's so old. Do you think they make them that way any more? It's perfect - perfect size, perfect shape, it holds all the essential junk within zippered, leak-resistant compartments, lays out flat so it always fits in an overfull suitcase, and it's not even ugly (maybe just a little ratty from years of use). But no, "they" had to 100% re-engineer this perfect, classic, functional design into myriad far less functional forms. Why??
And speaking of "they," why on earth can't they make cotton pants that don't bag out after an hour or two of wear? The elastic content that's in everything makes it worse. My jeans and khakis fit so comfortably and flatteringly fresh out of the dryer, but even the high end ones could fit two of me
by the end of the day. And at my size, that's really saying something.
Other things very, very low on my approval list: people whose outgoing voice or e-mail messages tell me they'll get back to me at their earliest convenience. Wow, goodness, I'd sure hate to inconvenience them! (The polite outgoing form, obviously, is to commit to respond at their earliest opportunity.) The nearly ubiquitous misuse of the word simplistic drives me insane as well. Here's another one: the use of frigging (as an adjective) in "polite" company, as a supposedly milder version of fucking. Doesn't anyone know what frigging means??
Do I sound the least bit crabby today?

Thursday, June 26, 2008

From the Polysyllaby Department

The following entry is from pages 251-252 of A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H.W. Fowler, revised and edited by Sir Ernest Gowers, Oxford University Press, 1965:

"hugeous. Those who use the form perhaps do so chiefly under the impression that they are satirizing the ignorant with a non-existent word, as others of their kind do with mischevious or underconstumble or high-strikes for mischievous, understand, and hysterics. It is in fact a good old word, and corresponds rather to vasty and stilly by the side of vast and still; but it is practically obsolete, and, as its correctness robs it of its facetious capabilities, it might be allowed to rest in peace."

Thanks, I think I'll just stick with ginormous for now.


Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Who knew ID would be so hard?


I took this early-morning, clear-day photo of a red squirrel chowing down on bright red catkins on the shore of Colter Bay in Grand Teton National Park. I decided it would behoove me to identify the particular tree that produces these striking deep red flowers, and have had the darnedest time doing it. I've even asked one of the Park's naturalists; she and her colleague think it may be a thin leafed alder. Another Park staffer thinks it is a cottonwood (type unknown). It does appear on Googling "red catkin" images that it is a member of the Populus family (laurels, cottonwoods, poplars, and aspens) but I can't nail it for certain and I guess no one else can absent a good view of the trunk/bark and leaves. If you know, please tell me!

Saturday, June 14, 2008

The funny thing about getting old...er


I have been with my beloved partner, KLK, for 23 years. KLK is eight years younger than I, and should be commensurately far behind me in the deterioration process we all more or less experience as we hit the start of our second half century.

Since he thought himself a 97-pound weakling in high school, and desired to emulate (or compete with, or prove himself to) his well-built, masculine father, he has exercised religiously since then. His routine throughout his adult life included running for his aerobic workout, and lifting free weights for strength and bulk. I always found his lean physique, gently curved and firm belly, and large upper arms to be endearingly attractive. But I never realized how I have taken his strength for granted. Yes, I surely did assume he would be there at the far end of whatever heavy object needed to be moved, held, or hefted, in spite of increasingly frequent visits to the orthopedist for assurance that this, that, or the other joint or muscle pain was not serious.

Recently (very recently), he celebrated his 50th birthday. Three weeks later, he completely detached one of two bicep tendons in his left arm. He'd been installing a window air conditioner in his grandma's window, but the snap suddenly came when he had nothing in his hands. He's had considerable pain, which he recognized from the moment it happened as serious, since. His doctor says the MRI he had a month ago for shoulder pain shows a partial rotator cuff tear, and the bicep destruction needs no high-tech diagnostics, as it is evident just looking at his arm when he bends his elbow where the muscle has rolled back on itself, leaving a cave in his upper arm where it used to be stretched taut by the tendon attached at the other end to his shoulder. The treatment is rest (he's not terribly good at that), gentle physical therapy, which he will do, and time. The best outcome would be complete resolution of the pain. He will never have that strength of youth again, though, and he cannot, at least in the foreseeable future, be the guy I call when our granite-topped (yes!) dining table needs moving.

In some ways, this has been more of a reality check for me even than comparing photos of my face from 30, 20,10 years ago with what I look like today in the mirror. It's true what they say, even as one pushes 60 there's no inner feeling of difference, though it's also true that memory and other weird things start to slip (I sometimes experience aphasia and entirely the wrong word - spoken, written, or typed - comes out; probably an early indicator of eventual dementia, but I'm not quite there yet).

Denial is a good thing, but it only gets you so far.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Grizzly in motion

This little video of the bear below was shot by KLK:
If you like it, it's worth watching in "high quality" mode at YouTube!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Missive from Yellowstone


For now, this trip report will have to be in the form of a photo only (I'm a little busy catching up back here in Chicago!)

This is a large, wild grizzly bear, probably a boar (male). Enjoy!