Saturday, May 25, 2019

WEED TREES

You just can't keep nature down! (Walking from St. Anne to Beaconsfield)

Sunday, May 12, 2019

CALIFORNIA DREAMING

Wine Coast Country
"Stewartship Travel"
San Simeon "hub"
hike Fiscalini Ranch Presere
sand dunes at Oceano, Oso Flaco Lake Natural Area mile long boardwalk(Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes complex)
OCTOBER TO FEBRUARY 50,000 monarch butterflies migrate to winter in Pismo State beach eucalyptus grove
El Camino Real, connecting California missions
kayak Morro Bay
Avila Beach and hot springs, protected bay and white sand
view of the way to Los Osos
Cayucos - beach town, look for sea otters
Hearst castle
Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary
Piedras blancas elephant seal rookery


PHILADELPHIA TRAVEL PLANNING

Barnes Foundation museum, private collection by Dr Barnes MD and his wife in honour of the teaching (without segregation)as a basic principle of democracy  (John Dewey)
Rodin museum - the largest collection outside Paris
Delaware Art Museum
National Liberty Museum
Liberty Bell
University of Pennsylvania - Ivy League, Victorian-era Venetian Gothic fine arts library, Richards Medical Building, LOVE sculpture, Ben Franklin founder statues, Penn museum Egyptian Gallery
Cheesesteaks
Imitate Rocky on the 72 steps of Philadelphia Museum of Art (Gonna Fly Now)
Opera Philadelphia
Old City
Hotel Monaco (1907 iconic office tower) Empire and Greek Revival Lafayette building
Hotel Palomar
Ritz-Carlton
Independence Hall
Philadelphia Zoo
Eastern State Penitentiary
Philadelphia Museum of Art Van Gogh’s Sunflowers, 
Mutter Museum (medical museum)
Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University
Betsy Ross House
Weizmann Jewish Museum

Greater Philadelphia - Delaware, NJ, Pennsylvania
Valley Forge National Historical Park (George Washington)
John James Audubon Center
Spring Mountain Adventures
Woodside Lodge
Longwood Gardens and Fountain in Brandywine River with Nemours mansion inspired by Versailles
Rittenhouse square
Franklin Institute (1842 established to honour the inventions of Benjamin Franklin)

 From National Geographic Traveller February 2013

Making History-a kids free-for-all

Ponder, like Benjamin Franklin, whether the sun is rising or setting, carved into the back of General George Washington’s chair inside Independence Hall

Listen for Loyalist ghosts who were hanged, whispering in Bladen’s court, a secret passageway off Elfreth’s Alley

Make grave rubbings of notable Philadelphians at St. Peter’s Church cemetery in Society Hill

Mail a postcard from the B.Free Franklin post office where clerks hand-cancel stamps with a colonial era postmark

Find out what shag carpet is at Jones, a paean to 70s decor and groovy Mac and cheese

Duck into the Curtis center to gaze at Dream Garden, a mosaic made of 100,000 pieces of Tiffany glass

Try out two early 20th century candies: a clove drop and peppermint Gibraltar at Shane Candies

Putt through the crack in the Liberty Bell at the Philly-themed mini golf course at Franklin square.

Walk across a huge map of the city that spans the gallery floor at the Philadelphia History Museum

Book a tour(or overnight stay) on the WWII battleship New Jersey(ferry from Penn’s landing)

Run up the stairs like Rocky in a training montage

Ask a local where to eat a Philly cheesesteaks sandwich, and which cheese to add


MARIE KONDO SPARKS JOY

If you haven't heard of this Japanese organizer, you are in for a treat. She sounds as sweet as cotton candy. She is as pretty as a cloud. She is unfailingly confident in how to hone down your stuff and find better ways to store what you end up keeping, once you have purged yourself of anything that doesn't "spark joy".

Her KonMari method has six rules:

1. Commit to tidying up
2. Imagine your ideal lifestyle
3. Finish discarding first
4. Tidy by category, not location. E.g. Clothes: get all together, in one place
5. Follow the right order
6. Ask yourself if it sparks joy

She identifies 4 obstacles and how to overcome them

1. Space. Don't blame your space. Organize any space with storage of all things of the same category together. Don't scatter them in different places around the house. Store vertically.

2. Sentimentality. Tidy these only after you have organized the less emotional categories. Start with clothing, books, and papers. If you encounter an item that brings back a memory, set it aside as the sentimental category. If you keep them, cherish your treasures by keeping them proudly.

3. Guilt. If you are given a gift you don't love, express gratitude but then get rid of it.

4. Money. Don't start buying things to store your stuff, unless you have the budget and after you have decided what you are keeping.

In an interview, she suggest a house can be tidied in 5 days. Don't tidy by room. One day tidy clothes., the next books.

If you are ready to get rid of something but things are piling up, set a schedule and assign a date. If a month goes by, just donate it.

Tidy yourself before you tidy the things that belong to the whole family.

If it doesn't spark joy, get rid of it!


HOW TO BE A GOOD NEIGHBOUR


From Daniel Bortz, The Washington Post

Share important information: housekeeper, handyman, best stores
Keep up curb appeal
Be a responsible pet owner
Organize a service project: go the extra mile for your community
Invite them over for a social event
Don't be a gossip
Be a respectful party host: keep the noise down
Abide by community rules
Handle conflict judiciously: resolve directly as much as possible

DON'T FEEL SORRY FOR YOURSELF

Sometimes I hear my friends and I am jealous. They have paid vacations, retirement plans, and spouses that take care of them. My life is divided in half, with half the savings, child support and no paid vacations or anyone to take care of me.

Then two things occur and I realize I am very fortunate.

First, I think of work. I am grateful for life, and see instantly that I have lost perspective. To be healthy and home is the greatest thing many are wishing for, and I have both.

Second, I read of stories like Isabella Hellmann. She disappeared off the  coast of Florida on her honeymoon, and the FBI suspect her husband of her murder.

Maybe the Stoics have it right. It is easy to be grateful when you keep your life in perspective. My glass is full enough!

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

IT'S NOT ALL JUST GREEK TO ME!

I have had two weeks now, travelling in Greece, trying to decipher signs and learning to read some Greek along the way. It comes in fits and starts, but it has helped me in reading road signs and understanding different concepts.

This was my favourite, and illustrated perfectly the difficulty in distinguishing one Greek character from another.  But it was an "aha!" moment that I had getting off the plane from Thira to Athens, and it certainly helped that there was the english above it. Honestly, I had seen this particular word dozens of times, but almost always when there was an emergency exit sign with a pictogram inside a museum or hotel.



Following the triangle indicating the direction of the exit, there are 6 letters. I understand why my brain never bothered to try and translate more letters when it understood less. But, when I thought about it, I was curious, so I tried to break it down, like all the other words that made no sense until I transposed them to the alphabet I knew (in a reverse dyslexia explained by Rick Riordan in the Percy Jackson series). There are 2 Os, so no help. I know the open triangle from math and delta doesn't help. The remaining letters (first, second and last) all look like an E, but when I started to think it through in my painfully slow translation, letter by letter, it revealed itself in a remarkable way that any English speaker would recognize:

E X O D U S

FIRA-IA HIKE, SANTORINI




Every window is a picture. We stopped so many times to look or photograph, we doubled the time it took to hike the 12 k!
The start of the path along one of the most beautiful walks you can make in a pair of runners and with a few euros in your pocket. That said, it would not be a place I would recommend, because of its ecological restraints. Santorini is a great example of how armchair travel is the ideal way to see for some of our world's most beautiful places.
The low white walls framed every set of doors as a window to the sea
Fira, and my favourite sunset viewpoint, very close to our Hotel Athios.
Such a beautiful view to the center of the volcano. The Aegean Sea here is called the Caldera. It left Santorini with it's characteristic lava rock in red, black, yellow and white, but with no natural source of potable water. Very grateful for North American access to water without the need for plastic!

Signature Santorini, but like Venice, it's a skeleton emptied largely of natives and seasonally inhabited by tourists from around the world. Very sobering, with the vast majority workers from all over economically depressed Greece, mostly the mainland.
Markers at the junctions of trails to Fira, Ia, near Skaros 

Outcropping at Skaros. View out to the volcano center that formed the island.
The man on the right was a Georgian (the country) wedding photographer flown out for the occasion, and the people on the left were Canadians from Toronto who just had a perfect picture taken by him. I insisted he show them (he was very good at finding the moment) and then kindly consented to repeating the shot on their camera for them to treasure. My version is amateur, but I love the people you meet on a mountain. It's always more interesting than anywhere else.
Ruins of an ancient castle, we heard a tour guide say.

View back to Fira
View down to a church from around the other side of the trail
The rooftop of the church. Quite a work of determination and pilgrimage!
The modern hiker - cellphone and iced frappaccino!
Lava stone pathways make the path easy to follow from Fira
Spring flowers loving the wind and sun
First views of Ia
IA (OIA) sunset
Nocturnal lights on Fira

TIME WELL WASTED

I was looking for an album cover to add to iTunes artwork for the Adele album 21 and laughed my head off when I saw this in the images on the page!



His inspiration:

THE ACROPOLIS, ATHENS