elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, December 8th, 2013 08:43 am
It's the Open House Meme for the day. [livejournal.com profile] lyrstzha asks me, "How about 10 surreal things that have happened to you."

I'm not sure i experience much as surreal. Part of it is the daily rut does not allow much in the way of novel experience. And then my context for surrealism is Dali, Magritte, and de Chirico. What does surreal mean for me, my experience?

When i read the question, my first thought was that the one surreal event was when the VP called to tell me about the re-organization that would give me a new manager. The out-of-the-blue and unlooked-for nature of the phone call, coupled with the utterly uncharacteristic nature of simple communication from the VP pushed me into a different sense of time and place.

Another moment that popped into mind was a hotel stay in Chicago due to a missed flight. Was that this year? I can't recall. The sense of out-of-time and out-of-space of the hotel stay created a sensory rich but untethered memory: arriving in the dark, departing in the dark, the luxurious room and no luggage, the glorious soaking tub, the disappointment of not arriving at home but the relief of the weekend.

Much of what i intentionally experience is the landscape, and i don't think of it as surreal. I could frame it that way, i think, particularly the trip east of the Sierras in May. The predawn drive across the basin to the tufa at Mono Lake could be cast as surreal. The long sloping vista from the highway to the lake revealed the car lights of similar travelers ahead of me, the dust rising from cars rattling down the dirt road, all under the red velvet sky. Another moment from the trip was our afternoon nap in our tent cabin. The dry heat was particularly noticeable in the tent, but the large fan, its cast iron stand something out of a movie from the 40s, relieved much of the unpleasantness. Above us, the sun cast the flickering shadow of the cottonwood leaves. Then there was being hit by a dust devil near the long abandoned train platform named Zurich, the night drive out of the White Mountains descending eight thousand feet in an hour from the cold bristlecone pines back to the warm desert.

Hmm, i read the question as ten things this year -- and see my whole life was game. There is a mystical experience i had one foggy moonlit night that could probably be described as surreal, but i'll take five this year as my answer.

--==∞==--

You too can pick a date and give me a question or prompt (or more than one!) at DW or LJ.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Tuesday, December 3rd, 2013 06:36 am
Another Open House Meme. You too can pick a date and give me a question or prompt at DW or LJ. Today, i'm answering the prompt from [personal profile] egret: Why are native plants important? What makes a landscape native? Really anything you want to say about native plants; I am fascinated by the whole concept/movement.

I suppose the first interest in native plants simply was walking through the woods growing up and learning the names of trees. Kudzu grows in the south in a remarkably invasive way and that would be my first awareness of non-native species.

When i moved to California, i was greeted by the rich ecosystems here, and many unfamiliar plants. I walked and biked to work by a creek and for a time i was a stream keeper. The program was starting an invasive plant mapping program, and i learned about how some plants have severe impacts on the environment. Arundo, the giant cane, sucks much more water out of the ground than the native plants: removing it allows many more plants to survive. I also learned about the native California buckeye. That small tree or large shrub looses its leaves in the summer, an adaptation to the dry season. I read an article about how creeks begin to flow again for a short while after buckeyes loose their leaves, as the plants are no longer pumping water from the water table.

Native plants are more, then, than just the plants that happened to grow in a place before "the Columbian exchange" -- the global trade that began with the discovery of the Americas and a new European route to China. (I'm listening to 1493 which addresses ecological impacts of the global trade.) They have evolved to be particularly efficient in collaboration with the soil, climate, and fauna of an area.

Non-native plants might live gently in a region: as streamkeepers the non-native cattails were accepted because they weren't aggressive (out-competing other species) and provided resources that were used by native birds. Other plants are like extractive imperialists, dominating the landscape, pulling out the resources, and exploiting the natives until all the resources are gone.

Why fight it? Ecologists coined the term Homogenocene to refer to this period by pointing at how ecologies are becoming homogenized. (Geologists' choice of Anthropocene seems to be winning the popularity contest.) What's wrong with plants moving to where they can be to top species in the ecosystem? Isn't that the whole point of evolution?

Long term, sure, there's no problem: life continues apace, new species will evolve to fill the niches created by the victors, etc, etc. But I'm selfish. I'm concerned with my species. I believe humans will lose in the shorter term, our term, as invasive plants push out the natives. We don't just loose the chance to marvel at diversity, but we loose the knowledge embedded in ecosystems. I think we can fairly compare an ecosystem as a data structure, not quite a library, but a system that carries much understanding about how to deal with certain requirements. Arundo and California Buckeyes deal with requirements differently: adaptation took different routes. If humans lost the information of the variety of ways to solve a problem by investigating a "why" in an ecosystem, it's similar to loosing Alexandria. We might discover the same information, but... well, it's not efficient.

I think of the efficiency as a selling point to folks with MBA trained sensibilities about value. Aesthetically, diversity and abundance is so pleasing to me, i can't help but assume that everyone would prefer a native forest to a kudzu mound. I can't help but feel there's a moral responsibility to ecosystems just as there is to indigenous cultures. I don't think i've learned to effectively analyze and point out those values, though.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, December 1st, 2013 07:02 pm
[livejournal.com profile] tx_cronopio asks if there are any TV shows that changed my life. This certainly brings up the question of how some but not all small perturbations can cause huge effects with time.

I'm going to assume, perhaps falsely, that if it doesn't come to mind easily, it's not worth counting. The shows i remember from childhood are MASH and Star Trek. I'm not sure how MASH changed my life but it has such a strong sense of commentary that i can't imagine it not shaping some of my outlook. Star Trek - i assume it was the first science fiction to which i was exposed. My parents tell me i wanted to be an astronaut early on, an aspiration i have no memory of, but they link that to watching the moon landings.

I didn't watch much TV and my family rarely went to movies, so these would be the shared cultural points.

Cosmos comes to mind as a strong reinforcer of my interest in science.

Years pass, and little TV comes to mind. In grad school, X-Files started. I watched it with my roommate in the first year, and she seemed to believe it was based on some sort of fact. A couple years later, Christine and i were finally living together and Christine was taken by the show. It was the first show we ever structured our life around, a show we would plan to be home to watch. I'm not sure there has been any other, since.

Buffy certainly helped create a small bond with some colleagues: Buffy Watching Women WithOut Employed Spouses, we called ourselves. We still gather.

--==∞==--

Since i was bemoaning how little i did on Saturday (during my normal waking hours), we attacked the outdoor closet last night. Christine had it emptied when i returned home from a long Meeting morning (committee meeting, teens, worship, hospitality and cleanup). I set to going through the boxes. Most were tax documents, some from as far back as 1995. They're now in the car for Christine to take to be shred. There were carpet remnants and other bits and bobs from the owner or prior tenants: out that went. A small quantity of mementos. I'm thinking of buying a scanner and hiring a task rabbit to scan in the papers. Depending on how smart the scanner is, i might be able to find the time to do it myself.

I found our wedding cake topper and two gold plated goblets in one box, a box of little boxes that favors were shared in, and the ring pillow i made. The ring pillow had a hollow spot in which i had put a charm: a net bag of herbs and various tokens, stitched with runes and symbols and with more tokens and charms hanging. I'm sure i can't remember all the meanings and intentions, and the years on the pennies didn't make any sense. The herbs were dispatched into the compost bin, and the charms and tokens returned to the pillow. I believe in the power of the intentionality with which i made the charm, but i'm not superstitious. Nonetheless, i had a twinge as the net bag ripped open -- what was i doing to this charm that was part of our wedding?

Well, if anything, rescuing it from the depths of the dark outside closet where it was buried under tax returns seems to be a good symbol!

I'm not sure what to do with the spun glass cake topper. Ah, i think i know a place i can stash it and the gold goblets - and perhaps go through an do more purging. I have boxes that hold the makings of charms from my more active days of charm-making. I could pass on those and use the space for the wedding mementos: i'll want them for our 50th, i suspect.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
Sunday, December 1st, 2013 05:18 pm
I'm going to brave this meme. Pick a day and give me a writing prompt, ask any question, suggest any topic. I may write around the topic, but i'll run with it some where.


December 01 - tx_cronopio
December 02 - (tx_cronopio)
December 03 - egret
December 04 -
December 05 -
December 06 -
December 07 -
December 08 - lyrstzha
December 09 -
December 10 > 15 - omens
December 11 > 16 - tx_cronopio
December 12
December 13 -
December 14 > 19 - omens
December 15 -
December 16 -
December 17 -
December 18 -
December 19 -
December 20 -
December 21-
December 22-
December 23-
December 24-
December 25-
December 26-
December 27-
December 28-
December 29-
December 30-
December 31- daisydumont