Saturday, January 29, 2011

Central Park - a Currier & Ives Moment

Central Park - image by Marilyn

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Desjoyeaux, dismasted, retires from Barcelona World Race

Michel Desjoyeaux and crew of Foncia retire 27 days out of Barcelona after partial dismasting of their Open 60 Foncia 600 miles south of Capetown.
Several years ago Desjoyeaux - in the single-handed Vendee Globe - lost his starter motor (for the diesel engine needed to keep the electrical systems charged).  He jury-rigged his boat to start the engine `manually' by wrapping a line around the flywheel and tying it to the boom.  When he released the main it spun the wheel and started the engine.  But there was no resourcefulness that could put back the top of the mast and allow the two man crew to continue their round-the-world effort.
24 skippers remain in the race, east bound in the roaring 40's of the Indian Ocean.  Race tracker HERE

Clearing winter storm

A familiar sight this month.  January saw 54" of snow fall in Central Park.  We just got another 18".  The temperature is 37F - so we'll soon have huge lakes at every corner in mid-Manhattan. (click on images to expand)
The Palisades after the storm



beleaguered nun

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Nabokov Theory on Polyommatus Blue Butterflies Is Vindicated - NYTimes.com


When “Lolita” made Nabokov a star in 1958, journalists were delighted to discover his hidden life as a butterfly expert. A famous photograph of Nabokov that appeared in The Saturday Evening Post when he was 66 is from a butterfly’s perspective. The looming Russian author swings a net with rapt concentration. But despite the fact that he was the best-known butterfly expert of his day and a Harvard museum curator, other lepidopterists considered Nabokov a dutiful but undistinguished researcher. He could describe details well, they granted, but did not produce scientifically important ideas.

But now it turns out....

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Rare 1770 Map of New York City Is Restored - NYTimes.com



This Times article describes the Brooklyn Historical Society's restoration of one of the three extant copies of a plan of the City of New York, 1770.   My sister Nancy gave us a print of the map a few years ago.  We got it framed and it now takes up most of the living room wall at our house in Friendship, Maine.
Rare 1770 Map of New York City Is Restored - NYTimes.com


For a close up go to the interactive feature

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Hawk, Hudson Heights

from the album Walking back from lunch by Ben Berry

First day of ice on the Hudson

makes me remember summer

the Back River from our living room - Friendship

the North (Hudson) River from our living room - New York

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Where the stripers go for the winter

Virginia Beach.  Or maybe they just follow Steve Pags.


what we have here is happy men and dead fish

New York - winter playground

It's colder up here in the Heights - of northern Manhattan, in Fort Tryon Park where Jenny  一之 and Du Ying 杜頴 found a place to go sliding after the second snow storm of the season.