Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun

Friday, July 26, 2013

THE WEEKENDER-HOW DO YOU SEE IT?

POINT OF VIEW
     Some of us are bewildered by the almost instant division that appears on practically every thing anymore.  Politics, religion, social structure, meaning and significance are all points of departure.  It seems more so now than ever.
     Henri Bergson, a writer and philosopher in the early 20th century and a Nobel winner for literature wrote of the power of intuition over mechanized intellect.  He also wrote of the continual force of creative and evolutionary energy, calling it "elan vital." I like the concept; never ending expression of new, original, life, birthing, a driving force to creation and understanding.  Mix that with my opening premise above and I'm left to conclude "some people get it and some just don't."
     Some adapt, learn, evolve, grow, expand. Some don't. Some see differences as a space in which opportunity exists, others see boundaries. While we all probably "get set in our ways," as rapidly as science is expanding and cognitive understanding is occurring and computer assistance advances, getting hung up in "old thought" seems to be counter to progress.  But then there are those who find "Progressive" a frightful term. So we come full circle.
      What's it mean?  Maybe we are indeed from different hemispheres of the brain, or different planets!
VIEW POINT ON SUNSET
 From a vineyard hill top, watching the painted sky.
Even the shadows enjoy the moment. 
 There may be better acoustical stages, but none with a better point of view.
THE ULTIMATE EXERCISE IN POINT OF VIEW
THIS IS LOTS OF FUN
     Thanks to my long time friend, artist and musician Jim for forwarding this video.  We are probably from close to the same planet.
      Have a great weekend.
      See you down the trail.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

KNOWING AND OPTIMISM & THE ALMOST EATEN BY A WHALE VIDEO

REASONS FOR OPTIMISM
    Tools, advances and new research are coming rapidly now in the area of brain science.  Discoveries in the last couple of years are astounding but because they are technical and complex they have not been widely reported nor understood by the public.
      PBS presenter and host Charlie Rose with Nobel Winning neuroscientist Dr. Erik Kandel have presented 14 programs over the last two years that can provide a breathtaking and mind charging survey of this extraordinary new science of understanding. 
       Here are a couple of ways to learn more or gain access to the series.
(this links to the full series and program descriptions)
(the final program in the series-looking at the new federal Brain Initiative)
     This is fascinating and informative television with special relevance to an aging boomer population.
A JULY SEA SIDE WALK
PACIFIC LULLABY
Napping seals without memory foam.


SOME KIND OF NEAR MISS
   Posting a video here that was shot just down the coast. It captures a moment where a couple of snorkelers come precariously close to being whale food.  They are swimming with a school of small fish when something happens they'll never forget.
     Whew!!!
     See you down the trail.

Monday, July 22, 2013

DIRTY AND THEN JUST NICE

DIRTY FIRST
    Jeremy Scahill is a savvy journalist who has survived war and produced major sets of information.  His latest, Dirty Wars is gripping, troubling and one of those pieces all Americans should see, but wont.
    It's a new day in world politics and the exercise of military might. Answers are not easy, solutions are complicated, but the operation of JSOC is something Americans need to come face to face with.
    The documentary draws you in from the first scene.  Scahill has a point of view, but when he gets information from the inside, to validate and expand what his reporting in Afghanistan, Yemen, Pakistan and elsewhere has shown, you realize this is not your daddy's warfare anymore, nor of course is the nature of the enemy. If you care a whit about the future of this nation and the exercise of power, you need to see this film.  Here's a trailer.
Now, here's a little antidote to help you chill.
NATURE IN BALANCE




See you down the trail.

Friday, July 19, 2013

THE WEEKENDER-EURO STYLE

FRENCH, OR ITALIAN, OR CALIFORNIAN
    Admiring what I call the old "buck board bench" at Giovanni's Harmony Cafe, warmed by the coastal sun, reading a note from our pal Bruce about recipes from Provence' as we await the latest offering from our local master chef, the aromas of the kitchen mixing with the roses, my cocoon of well being is bumped by a realization. 
    Lana and I have been chatting about the joie d'vivre of the Susan Loomis book ON RUE TATIN as she recounts her move to France to write a cookbook as her husband rebuilds a centuries old home in a northern town.  It strikes us that our life here in what some have called the "American Provence'" is authentic provincial joy itself. The cafe for example, guests reflect that with the alfresco setting, the climate and cuisine they could be in Tuscany or Provence.  Indeed! The culture here is younger than Loomis's Louviers in Normandy, but it is unique, as in 
ART ON A LADDER
    Art Van Rhyn that is.  Artist, gallery owner, musician, founder of the whimsical 927 art show, cartoonist of the weekly From the Beach cartoon in The Cambrian and personality unique is one of the pantheon of  "Cambria Characters" this village is known for. Emphasis on "character!"
CAN YOU GUESS WHAT THIS IS?
     30 minutes down the gorgeous Pacific Coast Highway is the beautiful small city of San Luis Obispo.  Truly Mediterranean in look and temperament, S-L-O, as many call it, is a university town, full of playfulness, as in the scene above. Bubblegum Alley.
   Yep, that's all gum.  It's a changing work of art, as generations have created their own morphing images, words, messages and etc. Bet they don't have one of these in Normandy.
    So later I'll slip into my easy chair, crack open ON RUE
TATIN, peak out the window at the Santa Lucia mountains and start thinking about what we're going to do for dinner.
The whir of the mixer as I write this is the reminder Lana is making pasta.  We'll probably pick a few tomatoes from one of the raised beds and likely find the other items to round it out at the Farmer's Market underway in the village. Many of the characters will be there. In fact the longer one stays here, the more we all transform, or aspire to our niche in the ways of eccentricity.  
    Oh yea, we'll be using olive oil, but then, which type?  While this region produces great wine, we have a burgeoning olive oil market as well.  So, perhaps, there is a place for our version of this fellow---enjoy.  
Have a fun, delicious and sexy weekend!
   See you down the trail.

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

THE ROLLING STONE FIRE-TWEET TALK NOT ENOUGH & WALT DISNEY LIVES

SOME THINGS ARE MORE COMPLICATED   
Courtesy of Rolling Stone & Huffington Post 
    Mainstream and social media are afire with comment about Rolling Stone putting the alleged Boston Marathon bomber on the cover.  
  "Making him a star" some cluck. Phooey! As more than one respondent said, it's good journalism to probe as the sub title says, "How a popular, promising student was failed by his friends, family, fell into radical Islam and became a monster." I want to know and more than a few of my friends have asked the same thing, in some wonderment.
   And to those cluckers and tsk tskkers, the same photo has played front and center in a lot of other media since April.
   I love Twitter and it's almost instant presentation of events.  As I've written, it's like the new version of the old wire machines that filled the radio and TV newsrooms of my youth-a constant stream.  But, where the AP and UPI and Reuters wires were detailed and in depth, social media is brief and in the case of the Rolling Stone cover, the trend is fueled by personal comment, often snarky and usually always too brief on which to base logic or argument. 
    And Rolling Stone has published a few other "controversial" covers.
Courtesy of Rolling Stone & Huffington Post 
  In fact the Huff Post found a few other historic covers that generated talk, and sales!
Courtesy of New Yorker and Huffington Post 
Courtesy of New Yorker and Huffington Post 
Courtesy of Huffington Post and Texas Monthly 

Courtesy of Esquire and Huffington Post
THE WORLD CHANGED ON THIS DAY
     Sunny southern California was the site in 1955 when Walt Disney gained a kind of immortality, at least in part.
        DISNEYLAND opened on this day back then.  The Disneyland legacy is profound, more than just the amusement and wonder of the parks and entertainment complex. A virtual science of crowd management, logistics, marketing, concept development and much more has followed.  You know there is something magic about being the happiest place on earth.  Still works.
ANOTHER HAPPY PLACE


     See you down the trail.

Monday, July 15, 2013

WE ARE TWO COUNTRIES

THE SAGA OF TRAYVON AND GEORGE
    While the headline is not original it seems to stick. The great divide in reaction to the Zimmerman verdict follows the divide that has been with this case from the start. Merely the latest click in a seemingly endless revolver  of disagreements. Some of the divides are ancient like unhealed wounds, unlearned lessons rising now like a chimera to stalk our future. Armed and dangerous.
      A REALLY SWEET FILM
     SEARCHING FOR SUGAR MAN has been on my list of films to see since I got a call from my pal Bruce one evening "You've got to see Searching for Sugar Man. We just watched it.  It is incredible.  You've got to see it!"
       Finally got to it, having missed it at the theatre.  It is an extraordinary story, told in a magnificent and creative way.  You probably know the story line-An American musician from the late 60's with great expectations but who fell into obscurity while remaining a huge star and influence in South Africa and who played a key role in inspiring anti apartheid musicians is thought to be dead.  A couple of South Africans launch a search for the truth which leads them and the viewer to an extraordinary discovery.
       Film maker Malik Bendjelloul weaves a great documentary.  His own story is fascinating.  He scrimped to raise the funds, ran out of money when filming and finished it with an IPhone and a special app. He's now an Oscar winner as well as the possessor of many other awards.  His own creative odyssey paid off.
       There are many impressive aspects to the film, the character of the artist being searched for being the lead. That quality may be best reflected in the persona of his daughters.  There is something almost mystical that radiates from the screen as they talk of their life and their father.

RANDOM CALIFORNIA SUMMER





     See you down the trail.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

THE WEEKENDER-ANOTHER WONDER

AMAZING
     Full disclosure here-I am a lover of Yosemite National Park and believe it is one of the truly amazing places on this planet.
     We are fascinated and thrilled by every visit. I wish everyone could spend time in this cathedral of nature.
      In the meantime, they provide marvelous videos that inform and provide their own wonder.  Enjoy this seasonal offering
      See you down the trail.