Light/Breezes

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

Thursday, May 8, 2014

EARTH SMILES

E'lan Vital
    Spring is a magical season. Many see it as symbolic of hope and renewal. We've paid special notice since the ancients organized rituals to mark its impact. 
    Henri Bergson, the French Philosopher wrote of what he called E'lan Vital-the dynamic force of creativity and life. Spring seems full of that expanding and unstoppable newness and energy.
    For some of you who suffered a long winter, the celebration is probably more dear. Wherever you read this, happy spring!






    See you down the trail.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

MOMENTS THAT MATTER

THE REACH
Solitary fisherman on Moonstone Beach, Cambria Ca.
REEL THOUGHTS
WATERMARK
    WATERMARK is an extraordinary 92 minute visual odyssey that spans the globe and reminds us in every image how inextricably linked humans are to water.  
     Canadian documentary filmmakers Jennifer Baichwal and Edward Burtynsky have created an extraordinary work that is captivating. It is stunning in its scope and beautiful. Scenes are majestic or powerful and so well captured they prompt audible gasps from the audience. WATERMARK is a film to see, either in the theatre or at home on a good screen.



JUST BEING PRESENT
   A public expression of gratitude to Lana for her artist's palette creation on our back slope.
   Frequent readers are familiar with the work. She has created a space filled with a couple dozen variety of blooms, drought tolerant too, that is an aerial playground for butterflies, bees, hummingbirds, beetles and other airborne denizens of the California coast. Orchestrated with wind chimes it is a perfect retreat for being present in the moment. It is a place of beauty, nature and transcendence.  

SCENES OF A STROLL
 A recent late morning stroll along San Luis Obispo County's Bob Jones "city to sea" trail was picture perfect.




 A FIRST EFFORT
   Bruce, aka The Catalyst, likes to experiment with recipes.
A few weeks ago he published his adventure with a coconut cream pie.  It "spoke to me," enough so to compel me to bake my very first pie. I'll do a couple of things differently next time, but it got nice reviews, none-the-less. Thanks Mr. T! Who'd ever think I would bake a pie?

   See you down the trail.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

GIGGLES, SILVER POUNDS STERLING, WHEN IS TOO LATE

AT LARGE IN A WORLD OF WONDER

   The ever curious Hemingway, partially committed to a quest.

Looks as though he's thinking about moving the rest of his body through-but, that won't happen easily.  Wonder if he "knows" that?

  Looks like his logic kicked in and he'll just stare from where he is.
NOTES FROM THE NEWS ROOM
 Silver Pounds Sterling
    The almost universal praise for NBA Commissioner Adam Silver is deserved. In banishing Donald Sterling for life, Silver added an historic chapter to the American story.  The racism evidenced in the recording may have been a personal statement, but when someone who owns a team in a league where African Americans are not only full participants but some the best of the game, the stupidity alone is deserving of a lifetime ban. In a culturally diverse modern world such sick and poisonous thought needs the kind of bold, decisive and courageous action taken by the still new Commissioner.  Silver earned his spurs.
     All of that being said, there is lesson and/or conundrum in the Donald Sterling incident. Stupid and foul though it was, Sterling was speaking privately and obviously his words were his thoughts. We are all entitled to our words and thoughts, though we must be mindful of how those words and thoughts enter into a wider world as well as the impact they have. There are no doubt tricky and complex under girding legal and philosophical issues here, but the bottom line in this case--if you say it, you must be prepared for the consequence.
ALARM BELLS SOUNDING
     Paul Rogers of the San Jose Mercury News writes here of the chilling discovery of increasing acidity level in the Pacific that in fact threatens all life on this blue planet.
     I saw a teleplay featuring a haunting scene where a journalist reviewed how human kind had ignored warnings of air and water pollution, climate changes, toxic discharges, extinction of species, decimation of forests, loss of crops until all of life was trapped in a terminal spiral. 
     It was only a drama, but I raged at how generations put financial concerns, politics and expediency above the well being of future generations. Increasingly I worry that we are the generation that has ignored the clear warning signs. And perhaps we are watching a rapidly escalating compounding of the consequences of such. Indeed we are reaping what we have sewn. When is too late?

     See you down the trail.

     

Monday, April 28, 2014

A VISIT WITH TREES-A SPRING BOUQUET and THE OLD BOY

THE LADIES TAKE THE SUN
     A majestic afternoon promenade of shadows

    with a Pacific breeze.
AMAZING THINGS YOU MAY NOT
KNOW ABOUT TREES
There is no question but you will learn from this!
AN OLD BOY
CAUGHT IN ACTION
    Despite being well retired and doing my best to be lazy,
occasionally it is like the bell for an old fire horse and I get 
pressed into some public speaking. Maybe this will convince the tax man some of those deductions are indeed real. 
PRETTY



  Enjoy your spring.
  See you down the trail.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

NOTES FROM THE BLUE PLANET

THE INFORMATION WARS
     Jonathan Landay of McClatchey Newspapers reports troubling news that amounts to a piling on after we've learned how invasive information mining already is.  
     Landay writes of a directive from James Clapper who works as the Director of National Intelligence.  Clapper's one man edict, with the power of law, forbids intelligence community employees from any contact with journalists.  Now, only the director, deputy director or public information officer of a member agency of the intelligence community is permitted contact. A very dangerous and sinister move.  
     No doubt Clapper and his advisers, rocked by the Snowden and earlier Wikileaks releases, and genuinely concerned about our security, believe this is the best thing. The danger though is when a single executive, or even a branch of government builds policy that restricts knowledge in a punitive way.  Under Clapper's edict, any offending intelligence community employee's career will be damaged or ended. There is also the philosophical issue of a government, meant to serve, deciding to hold information against, or away from those who empower it-we citizens.
      As I sat in an intelligence oversight conference room hidden away under the US Capitol dome, a ranking member of congress spoke earnestly of the hard choices and actions that must be taken in the field of intelligence, simply to give our government options for our security. There are few black and white constructs. Security and intelligence is a nether world where shades of gray and complexity are the multi layered norm. As my source told me "some of the decisions that are necessary, don't look so good in the light of day."
     In more than 4 decades of reporting I learned which sources I could trust and they in turn learned that I could be trusted. Now some of those people from federal law enforcement, intelligence and counter intelligence, defense, state and local police, Senate and House oversight committees, would not have been able to assist my work in reporting to the public.  
     No government is so good that it does not need to be watched, nor should it ever strive to be anything but transparent.  Men and women who hold positions of influence, elected, appointed or civil service are never above accountability. Journalism is an imperfect craft or profession but it provides a valuable surrogate role for citizens. Journalists must be able to gather and know all facts and as close an approximation to truth as possible, especially in the area of policy formulation and conduct. This is paramount in areas of national security, public safety and individual privacy. Clapper's one man edict, regardless of claims of nobility of intent, is wrong, chilling and dictatorial. 
     Good men and women who believe in the principles of this Democratic Republic and who do the hard work of intelligence and journalism will find ways to share information and knowledge and work around the dangerous Clapper policy. We are a government of, by and for the people and we can never accept anything less.
     A couple of weeks ago Central California readers of The Cambrian were surprised by the tone of an article I penned about the hiring of a public information officer for our Community Service District Board. "I agree with you but""you were awfully strong," or "too strong," or "too tough" were comments from a few friends. My point there derives from the same point as my reaction to the Clapper edict.  Government employees do not work for a political ideology, philosophy, policy leaning, or butt covering-they work for the public.
It is not easy. Issues are complicated. There are competing interests-but the constitutional frame work and the public's right to know should be guiding precepts. Clapper is a dedicated public servant, but he is wrong. I hope he reconsiders. This is tantamount to a gag order.
GARDENING IN A TIME OF DROUGHT
    Californians struggle through the drought finding ways to conserve water while governments look at water policy and permitting processes. 
       As an Earth Day celebration note we share a personal report.
     We've added rain barrels and redirected our downspouts.
These two are tied together.
   This barrel stands alone. These help to harvest rain, when we get it. Living in a coastal zone we are blessed with lots of spring and summer evening marine fog. It's amazing how much flows off the roof and the barrels are an improvement as a catchment. They can also be filled with non potable water.
    In a small way, we've become solar powered. 
 We opted for a small panel which feeds through a charge controller to a 12 volt battery that we store out of the elements in the plastic box.
    A ten amp pump with a 45 PSI rating connects the barrel's out flow to a hose that feeds into our irrigation system.
  Our native California friend Dick, a gardening veteran, helped modify the drip irrigation system by adding the white cap feed input.
    The single barrel will source the lower raised bed and tomato cage.
     The double barrels will source the hill top raised bed as well as the side beds. Most of the hill side itself is drought tolerant planting and not in need of much water.
  Fava beans are doing well in a new side bed.  They, as well,
  will be fed by barrels thanks to the power of the little pump.
                                           Ditto for the lemon tree
           and the newly planted grape.  The barrels, solar panel,
battery, charge controller, pump as well as the modification to the downspouts cost a few bucks, but allow us to conserve and continue to garden.  And the new 
     is a lot better than the old system of down spout capture by these old cat litter containers that also needed to be hauled up the hill.

     Happy Earth day.  Take good care of it.  It's the only one we have.

     See you down the trail.

Friday, April 18, 2014

BIG BLUE FASCINATION-THE WEEKENDER

AN HISTORIC EVENT
     There is no end to the fascination and enjoyment of seeing the Pacific. Living in a coastal community reminds me daily of the wonder of the big blue.
     Special thanks to our pal John, aka The Travel Answerman for giving us a heads up on an amazing National Geographic brief for your Weekend enjoyment. This is  amazing.
SPLASH
stills from Cambria's Lampton Cliff






    See you down the trail.