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Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Cape Cod Canal | Issuma
Safe return from the arctic! Back to Buzzards Bay for which my Buzzards Bay 14 - North River 2 - was designed. Well done, Richard and crew.
Cape Cod Canal | Issuma
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Indian Harbor Classic Yacht Race - Greenwich
Rosie - a Rosinante |
Pre-start |
The highlights for me were, of course, the L. Francis Herreshoff designs. In addition to my Buzzards Bay 14 - a Sensible Cruising Designs selection - there was the flagship Ticonderoga and the Rosinante's Rosie and Cadenza. And as part-time residents of Friendship, Maine, the Friendship Sloop Natanya must be mentioned. (full slideshow HERE) |
Indian Harbor Yacht Club - house and dock, Greenwich |
Ticonderoga |
Natanya - Friendship sloop |
North River 2 |
Natanya - bow |
Peter & Margaret Quigley's John Dory crossing our bow |
Sonny -stern |
Friday, September 17, 2010
Poetry: Seamus Heaney and Paul Muldoon - Two new collections
I've loved Seamus Heaney's poetry since the late 70's when I read Digging - the first poem in the first collection - 1966.
"Between my finger and my thumb the squat pen rests; snug as a gun", it begins. He tells of his father digging potatoes "stooping in rhythm through potato drills...the coarse boot nestled on the lug, the shaft/against the inside knee was levered firmly./ He rooted out the tall tops, buried the bright edge deep/ to scatter new potatoes that we picked/loving their cool hardness in our hands./By God, the old man could handle a spade./Just like his old man."
Seamus Heaney |
After he won the Nobel Prize fifteen years ago I asked him at a reading if between his finger and thumb the squat pen still rested. "Yes", he said, "but I wrote the Nobel Lecture on my new Mac".
This week he and fellow Northern Ireland poet Paul Muldoon released new collections.
Reading Mr. Heaney’s restrained, earthy poems, you can almost smell the bits of straw and dried sheep dung woven into their woolen fabrics. His work has as much compression, cogency and unhurried rural gravitas as that of any poet alive.
Mr. Muldoon, after toddling briefly in Mr. Heaney’s footsteps, has emerged as a much wilder cat, an allusive and riddling poet, one whose Irish roots are tucked into the shadows cast by his cerebral lightning.
Muldoon's poetry is less accessible - unlike the fabulous lyrics of his three-car garage, all-PhD rock band Racket. But click here to read the rest of the review.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Issuma: back to Nova Scotia
Issuma is back from Baffin island via Battle Harbor, Labrador, and has turned the corner at Cape St. Lawrence and is now at Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Another dream boat: Goat Island Skiff Yawl
I've always wanted a yawl. This one offers the illusion of building it myself - by buying the kit and assembling the boat. Built by Clint Chase of Portland, ME, the details are HERE
Monday, September 13, 2010
Sonny Rollins at 80 - a masterful performance by an Old Master
When he came on stage ambulating in an awkward,slow, wide gait we wondered. Until the first powerful, perfect note. And it lasted for two hours - with guest appearances by octoenarian drummer Roy haynes and the icon of the avant-garde - Ornette Coleman. Oh, and Jim Hall and trumpeter Roy Hargrove. Nate Chinen's review describes Rollins:
Pacing the stage in a tunic-like white shirt his head topped by a cumulonimbus of hair, he called to mind an old testament prophet, a figure of adamant authority." Amen.Music Review - Sonny Rollins Celebrates Birthday at Beacon Theater - NYTimes.com
Sunday, September 12, 2010
Aerial views of Manhattan
This is the iconic shot, but there are many more and more dramatic Manhattan shots with great composition, all taken from the air HERE - gathered by the Denver Post.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
The Front Yard
"Believe me my young friend, there is nothing - absolutely nothing half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats." |
After we cleared out the invasive jewelweed we turned our attention to the front yard. We pulled out the scraggly 40 foot silver maple, which Peter Green climbed and cut down for us. That opened the front yard. Step one was the raised bed, which Susan planted. The next was planting three evergreens - two Canaan firs and a balsam fir. (click images to enlarge)