Sunday, October 22, 2017
Masked Crusader Stymied by Ice Cream Selection at Area Grocery Store
Evan Raskin took this picture at an Ingles in Asheville (and wrote the headline to go with it). He didn't set this up, he just happened upon it.
Sunday, October 15, 2017
Tourist Binoculars
I love these tourist binoculars -- still 25 cents. This one is at the top of Grandfather Mountain, which is a fun place despite being a major tourist attraction. We were there during one of the busiest weekends of the year. It's a pretty controlled experience, but it's a spectacular place and there were a hell of a lot of people there -- outside.
It also gives you the best possible view of one of North Carolina's greatest atrocities: Sugar Top, which spawned the North Carolina Mountain Ridge Protection Act that keeps anyone else from doing this.
And then there's the mile-high swinging bridge, which is really pretty cool.
Also worth noting that Grandfather Mountain is now run by a nonprofit and is part of a 4,000 acre preserve that's managed in cooperation with the Nature Conservancy and North Carolina State Parks.
Saturday, September 30, 2017
Saturday, September 23, 2017
The Great Brenda Harvey
Many people gathered at the Friends Meeting a few weeks ago to remember Brenda Harvey. Brenda was an extraordinary person: she worked at the Celo Health Center for decades, she and Ken Harvey were married for more than 50 years and raised to marvelous children, Kennan and Tasha (who are no longer children); she was an athlete, a great friend and neighbor, a generous volunteer, a thinker, an astute reader of books, and a person one was always glad to run into.
The program for the memorial included this pair of pictures of the Harvey family.
Many people spoke eloquently about their relationship with Brenda and her many contributions to the community and to other people's lives. And Jeff projected a video that he and Margot made a few weeks before Brenda died.
Almost to the end, Brenda was part of a weekly dance group. After one of their sessions, Margot invited the women to her house and asked them to improvise movement to a wonderful song by The Avett Brothers while Jeff shot video. Jeff and Margot had previously recorded a group of Brenda's friends and family, including her two granddaughters, dancing to the song, and Jeff layered the two videos to make this beautiful collage.
The program for the memorial included this pair of pictures of the Harvey family.
Many people spoke eloquently about their relationship with Brenda and her many contributions to the community and to other people's lives. And Jeff projected a video that he and Margot made a few weeks before Brenda died.
Almost to the end, Brenda was part of a weekly dance group. After one of their sessions, Margot invited the women to her house and asked them to improvise movement to a wonderful song by The Avett Brothers while Jeff shot video. Jeff and Margot had previously recorded a group of Brenda's friends and family, including her two granddaughters, dancing to the song, and Jeff layered the two videos to make this beautiful collage.
Sunday, September 10, 2017
Stompin' at Festatoa
Cuttin' a mulch at the 2017 Festatoa, inspired by the sounds of the Yves Giraud Band. Thanks to Jody and Jennifer for letting everyone have a mad great time at their place, and thanks to the many people who contributed in one way or another. It was a beautiful day.
Sunday, September 3, 2017
Cloudy Eclipse from Jay
Jay Zietlow was part of the gathering at David and Kim's documented below. Unlike me, he applied himself to making photographs during the height of the event. Here are four pictures from just before, during, and just after the totality. The picture from the totality appears to be showing a solar flare. Click to see them bigger.
Saturday, August 26, 2017
Eclipsed!
A whole bunch of people gathered on August 21 at David and Kim's new house to watch the eclipse in the Area of Totality (which would make a good name for a band or a novel).
Most folks got there early so they could get good and ready.
Like Jacob, who was good and ready.
Some of the kids found it hard to make the eclipse glasses work, so Pace and David made some modified glasses
that were easier to use. (At least one older person found this technology helpful as well.)
Matt and some other folks made a crawl-in, pinhole eclipse viewer.
This is what it was doing inside (multiple pinholes were involved).
Tracking the progress of the moon across the sun.
The sky got pretty cloudy just before the totality, but the clouds were moving and had thin places, so we got a series of beautiful, breathtaking views of the corona. Despite the dimming of the light beforehand, the sudden darkness was stunning. During the last bit of the totality, the sun was not visible at all, and the first bit of direct sunlight to slip past the moon lit up the clouds as though someone had flipped a switch.
Click to see this larger. You might know some of these fine people.
An eclipse in the palm of my hand. Many thanks to David and Kim for being excellent hosts.
Click the triangle to hear a bit of what it sounded like:
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